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Elsevier, Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 11(98), p. 4306-4315

DOI: 10.1002/jps.21698

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Effect of Pregnancy on Nitrofurantoin Disposition in Mice

Journal article published in 2009 by Yi Zhang, Lin Zhou, Jashvant D. Unadkat ORCID, Qingcheng Mao
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

We investigated the effect of pregnancy on nitrofurantoin (NFT) disposition in wild-type and Bcrp1(-/-) mice. Pregnant and non-pregnant mice were administered NFT intravenously (5 mg/kg) or orally (10 mg/kg). Blood samples were collected at various times (5-60 min) after drug administration, plasma NFT concentrations determined by HPLC/UV, and pharmacokinetic parameters estimated. Dose-normalized area under the plasma concentration-time curve (AUC), terminal plasma half-life (T(1/2)), total plasma clearance (CL), and steady-state volume of distribution (V(ss)) of intravenous NFT in wild-type or Bcrp1(-/-) mice were not altered by pregnancy. After oral administration, pregnancy did not affect dose-normalized AUC of NFT in wild-type mice; however, dose-normalized AUC in Bcrp1(-/-) mice was decreased by approximately 70% by pregnancy. In conclusion, since Bcrp1 plays a minor role in the systemic clearance of NFT in female mice, pregnancy did not affect disposition of intravenous NFT despite the fact that Bcrp1 expression in the liver and kidney of mice is significantly induced by pregnancy. On the other hand, pregnancy may affect expression and activity of certain intestinal efflux transporters and/or metabolic enzymes in Bcrp1(-/-) mice, resulting in a drastic decrease in the systemic exposure of oral NFT in pregnant Bcrp1(-/-) mice.