LPS-Induced Inflammation Affects Midazolam Clearance in Juvenile Mice in an Age-Dependent Manner

LPS 诱导的炎症以年龄依赖的方式影响幼年小鼠的咪达唑仑清除率

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作者:Yi Zheng, Pan-Pan Ye, Yue Zhou, Su-Ying Wu, Xi-Ting Liu, Bin Du, Bo-Hao Tang, Min Kan, Ai-Qing Nie, Rui Yin, Meng Wang, Guo-Xiang Hao, Lin-Lin Song, Xin-Mei Yang, Xin Huang, Le-Qun Su, Wen-Qi Wang, John van den Anker, Wei Zhao

Conclusion

Both inflammation and ontogeny have an essential role in CYP3A activity in mice. The effect of LPS-induced systemic inflammation on midazolam clearance in mice is dependent on postnatal age.

Methods

Different doses (2 and 5 mg/kg) of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) were used to induce different degrees of systemic inflammation in Swiss mice (postnatal age 9-42 days, n = 220). The CYP3A substrate midazolam was selected as the pharmacological probe to study CYP3A activity. Postnatal age, current body weight, serum amyloid A protein 1 (SAA1) levels and LPS doses were collected as covariates to perform a population pharmacokinetic analysis using NONMEM 7.2.

Purpose

Inflammation has a significant impact on CYP3A activity. We hypothesized that this effect might be age dependent. Our objective was to conduct a population pharmacokinetic study of midazolam in mice at different developmental stages with varying degrees of inflammation to verify our hypothesis.

Results

A population pharmacokinetic model of midazolam in juvenile and adult mice was established. Postnatal age and current body weight were the most significant and positive covariates for clearance and volume of distribution. LPS dosage was the most significant and negative covariate for clearance. LPS dosage can significantly reduce the clearance of midazolam by 21.8% and 38.7% with 2 mg/kg and 5 mg/kg, respectively. Moreover, the magnitude of the reduction was higher in mice with advancing postnatal age.

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