Effects of gender, age, and race on the pharmacokinetics of etoposide after intravenous administration of etoposide phosphate in cancer patients
- PMID: 8996572
Effects of gender, age, and race on the pharmacokinetics of etoposide after intravenous administration of etoposide phosphate in cancer patients
Abstract
The influence of gender, age, and race on the pharmacokinetics of etoposide and on the extent of conversion of etoposide phosphate (Etopophos; Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, Princeton, NJ) to etoposide are summarized. Included in the integrated statistical analyses were 192 patients from six phase I/II studies (102 men and 90 women, 128 aged < or = 65 years and 64 aged > 65 years; 134 were white, 18 were other races, and race was not recorded for 40). The dose of etoposide phosphate ranged from 25 to 200 mg/m2 of etoposide equivalents and was administered as 5-(bolus) to 210-minute intravenous infusions. Total body clearance of etoposide was comparable between men and women. However, significantly lower steady-state volumes of distribution and shorter half-lives were observed in women relative to men. Patients who were older than 65 years had significantly lower etoposide total body clearance and longer half-lives than younger patients. The gender- and age-related differences observed in the pharmacokinetic parameters of etoposide were significant but generally of a small magnitude (< or = 13%), indicating no need for dose adjustment in these patient populations. There were no significant race-related differences in the pharmacokinetic parameters of etoposide. All patients showed rapid conversion of etoposide phosphate to etoposide. The individual area under the plasma concentration-time curve ratio of etoposide phosphate/etoposide was < or = 0.0324, indicating that etoposide was the major circulating moiety after infusion of etoposide phosphate. Significant gender-, age-, or race-related differences in the area under the plasma concentration-time curve ratios were not observed. An evaluation of the area under the plasma concentration-time curve ratios with respect to infusion time suggested that the conversion of etoposide phosphate to etoposide was independent of infusion time.
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