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Wednesday, 13 April 2011
Disease-Modifying Antirheumatic Drugs part 2
Methotrexate is now considered the  DMARD of first choice to treat rheumatoid arthritis and is used in 50–70% of  patients. It is active in this condition at much lower doses than those needed  in cancer chemotherapy.
Mechanism of Action
Methotrexate's principal mechanism of  action at the low doses used in the rheumatic diseases probably relates to  inhibition of aminoimidazolecarboxamide ribonucleotide (AICAR) transformylase  and thymidylate synthetase, with secondary effects on polymorphonuclear  chemotaxis. There is some effect on dihydrofolate reductase and this affects  lymphocyte and macrophage function, but this is not its principal mechanism of  action. Methotrexate has direct inhibitory effects on proliferation and  stimulates apoptosis in immune-inflammatory cells. Additionally, inhibition of  proinflammatory cytokines linked to rheumatoid synovitis has been shown, leading  to decreased inflammation seen with rheumatoid arthritis.
Pharmacokinetics
The drug is approximately 70% absorbed  after oral administration. It is metabolized to a less active  hydroxylated metabolite, and both the parent compound and the metabolite are  polyglutamated within cells, where they stay for prolonged periods.  Methotrexate's serum half-life is usually only 6–9 hours, although it may be as  long as 24 hours in some individuals. Methotrexate's concentration is increased  in the presence of hydroxychloroquine, which can reduce the clearance or  increase the tubular reabsorption of methotrexate. This drug is excreted  principally in the urine, but up to 30% may be excreted in bile.
Indications
Although the most common methotrexate  dosing regimen for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis is 15–25 mg weekly,  there is an increased effect up to 30–35 mg weekly. The drug decreases the rate  of appearance of new erosions. Evidence supports its use in juvenile chronic  arthritis, and it has been used in psoriasis, psoriatic arthritis, ankylosing  spondylitis, polymyositis, dermatomyositis, Wegener's granulomatosis, giant cell  arteritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, and vasculitis.
Adverse Effects
Nausea and mucosal ulcers are the most  common toxicities. Progressive dose-related hepatotoxicity in the form of enzyme  elevation occurs frequently, but cirrhosis is rare (< 1%). Liver toxicity is  not related to serum methotrexate concentrations, and liver biopsy follow-up is  only recommended every 5 years. A rare hypersensitivity-like lung reaction with  acute shortness of breath is documented, as are pseudolymphomatous reactions.  The incidence of gastrointestinal and liver function test abnormalities can be  reduced by the use of leucovorin 24 hours after each weekly dose or by the use  of daily folic acid, although this may decrease the efficacy of the  methotrexate. This drug is contraindicated in pregnancy.
Mechanism of Action
Mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) is  converted to mycophenolic acid, the active form of the drug. The active product  inhibits cytosine monophosphate dehydrogenase and, secondarily, inhibits T-cell  lymphocyte proliferation; downstream, it interferes with leukocyte adhesion to  endothelial cells through inhibition of E-selectin, P-selectin, and  intercellular adhesion molecule 1 
Indications
MMF is effective for the treatment of  renal disease due to systemic lupus erythematosus and may be useful in  vasculitis and Wegener's granulomatosis. Although MMF is occasionally used at a  dosage of 2 g/d to treat rheumatoid arthritis, there are no well-controlled data  regarding its efficacy in this disease.
Rituximab
Mechanism of Action
Rituximab is a chimeric monoclonal  antibody that targets CD20 B lymphocytes. This depletion takes  place through cell-mediated and complement-dependent cytotoxicity and  stimulation of cell apoptosis. Depletion of B lymphocytes reduces inflammation  by decreasing the presentation of antigens to T lymphocytes and inhibiting the  secretion of proinflammatory cytokines. Rituximab rapidly depletes peripheral B  cells although this depletion neither correlates with efficacy nor with  toxicity.
Rituximab has shown benefit in the  treatment of rheumatoid arthritis refractory to anti-TNF agents. It has been  approved for the treatment of active rheumatoid arthritis when combined with  methotrexate.
Pharmacokinetics
Rituximab is given as two intravenous  infusions of 1000 mg, separated by 2 weeks. It may be repeated every 6–9 months,  as needed. Repeated courses remain effective. Pretreatment with glucocorticoids  given intravenously 30 minutes prior to infusion (usually 100 mg of  methylprednisolone) decreases the incidence and severity of infusion  reactions.
Indications
Rituximab is indicated for the  treatment of moderately to severely active rheumatoid arthritis in combination  with methotrexate in patients with an inadequate response to one or more  TNF- antagonists.
Adverse Effects
About 30% of patients develop rashes  with the first 1000 mg treatment; this incidence decreases to about 10% with the  second infusion and progressively decreases with each course of therapy  thereafter. These rashes do not usually require discontinuation of therapy  although urticarial or anaphylactoid reactions, of course, preclude further  therapy. Immunoglobulins (particularly IgG and IgM) may decrease with repeated  courses of therapy and infections can occur, although they do not seem directly  associated with the decreases in immunoglobulins. Rituximab has not been  associated with activation of tuberculosis, nor with the occurrence of lymphomas  or other tumors. Other adverse effects, eg, cardiovascular  events, are rare.
Mechanism of Action
Sulfasalazine is metabolized to  sulfapyridine and 5-aminosalicylic acid, and it is thought that the  sulfapyridine is probably the active moiety when treating rheumatoid arthritis  (unlike inflammatory bowel disease). Some authorities believe  that the parent compound, sulfasalazine, also has an effect. In treated  arthritis patients, IgA and IgM rheumatoid factor production are decreased.  Suppression of T-cell responses to concanavalin and inhibition of in vitro  B-cell proliferation have also been documented. In vitro studies have shown that  sulfasalazine or its metabolites inhibit the release of inflammatory cytokines,  including those produced by monocytes or macrophages, eg, interleukins-1, -6,  and -12, and TNF- .  These findings suggest a possible mechanism for the clinical efficacy of  sulfasalazine in rheumatoid arthritis.
Pharmacokinetics
Only 10–20% of orally administered  sulfasalazine is absorbed, although a fraction undergoes enterohepatic  recirculation into the bowel where it is reduced by intestinal bacteria to  liberate sulfapyridine and 5-aminosalicylic acid.  Sulfapyridine is well absorbed while 5-aminosalicylic acid remains unabsorbed.  Some sulfasalazine is excreted unchanged in the urine whereas sulfapyridine is  excreted after hepatic acetylation and hydroxylation. Sulfasalazine's half-life  is 6–17 hours.
Indications
Sulfasalazine is effective in  rheumatoid arthritis and reduces radiologic disease progression. It has been  used in juvenile chronic arthritis and in ankylosing spondylitis and its  associated uveitis. The usual regimen is 2–3 g/d.
Adverse Effects
Approximately 30% of patients using  sulfasalazine discontinue the drug because of toxicity. Common adverse effects  include nausea, vomiting, headache, and rash. Hemolytic anemia and  methemoglobinemia also occur, but rarely. Neutropenia occurs in 1–5% of  patients, while thrombocytopenia is very rare. Pulmonary toxicity and positive  double-stranded DNA are occasionally seen, but drug-induced lupus is rare.  Reversible infertility occurs in men, but sulfasalazine does not affect  fertility in women. The drug does not appear to be teratogenic.
Disease-Modifying Antirheumatic Drugs
DMARDs
Careful clinical and epidemiologic  studies have shown that rheumatoid arthritis is an immunologic disease that  causes significant systemic effects which shorten life in addition to the joint  disease that reduces mobility and quality of life. NSAIDs offer mainly  symptomatic relief; they reduce inflammation and the pain it causes and often  preserve function, but they have little effect on the progression of bone and  cartilage destruction. Interest has therefore centered on finding treatments  that might arrest—or at least slow—this progression by modifying the disease  itself. The effects of disease-modifying therapies may take 6 weeks to 6 months  to become evident although some biologics are effective within 2 weeks;  generally, they are slow-acting compared with NSAIDs.
These therapies include methotrexate, a  T-cell-modulating biologic (abatacept), azathioprine, chloroquine and  hydroxychloroquine, cyclophosphamide, cyclosporine, leflunomide, mycophenolate  mofetil, a B-cell cytotoxic agent (rituximab), sulfasalazine, and the  TNF- -blocking  agents. These drugs comprise both biologically derived and nonbiologic agents  and will be listed alphabetically, independent of origin. Gold salts, which were  once extensively used, are no longer recommended because of their significant  toxicities and questionable efficacy.
Abatacept
Abatacept is a costimulation modulator  that inhibits the activation of T cells. After a T cell  has engaged an antigen-presenting cell (APC), a signal is produced by CD28 on  the T cell that interacts with CD80 or CD86 on the APC, leading to T-cell  activation. Abatacept (which contains the endogenous ligand CTLA-4) binds to  CD80 and 86, thereby inhibiting the binding to CD28 and preventing the  activation of T cells.
Pharmacokinetics
Abatacept is given as an intravenous  infusion in three initial doses (day 0, week 2, and week 4), followed by monthly  infusions. The dose is based on body weight, with patients weighing less than 60  kg receiving 500 mg, those 60–100 kg receiving 750 mg, and those more than 100  kg receiving 1000 mg. Dosing regimens in any adult group can be increased if  needed. The terminal serum half-life is 13–16 days. Coadministration with  methotrexate, NSAIDs, and corticosteroids does not influence abatacept  clearance.
Indications
Abatacept can be used as monotherapy or  in combination with other DMARDs in patients with moderate to severe rheumatoid  arthritis who have had an inadequate response to other DMARDs. It reduces the  clinical signs and symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis, including slowing of  radiographic progression. It is also being tested in early rheumatoid  arthritis.
Adverse Effects
There is a slightly increased risk of  infection (as with other biologic DMARDs), predominantly of the upper  respiratory tract. Concomitant use with TNF- antagonists  is not recommended due to the increased incidence of serious infection with this  combination. Infusion-related reactions and hypersensitivity reactions,  including anaphylaxis, have been reported but are rare. Anti-abatacept antibody  formation is infrequent (< 5%) and has no effect on clinical outcomes. The  incidence of malignancies is similar to placebo with the exception of a possible  increase in lymphomas. The role of abatacept in this increase is unknown.
Mechanism of Action
Azathioprine acts through its major  metabolite, 6-thioguanine. 6-Thioguanine suppresses inosinic acid synthesis,  B-cell and T-cell function, immunoglobulin production, and interleukin-2  secretion.
Pharmacokinetics
The metabolism of azathioprine is  bimodal in humans, with rapid metabolizers clearing the drug four times faster  than slow metabolizers. Production of 6-thioguanine is dependent on thiopurine  methyltransferase (TPMT), and patients with low or absent TPMT activity (0.3% of  the population) are at particularly high risk of myelosuppression by excess  concentrations of the parent drug if dosage is not adjusted.
Indications
Azathioprine is approved for use in  rheumatoid arthritis and is used at a dosage of 2 mg/kg/d. Controlled trials  show efficacy in psoriatic arthritis, reactive arthritis, polymyositis, systemic  lupus erythematosus, and Behçet's disease.
Adverse Effects
Azathioprine's toxicity includes bone  marrow suppression, gastrointestinal disturbances, and some increase in  infection risk, lymphomas may be increased with  azathioprine use. Rarely, fever, rash, and hepatotoxicity signal acute allergic  reactions.
Mechanism of Action
Chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine are  used mainly in malaria and in the rheumatic diseases. The  mechanism of the anti-inflammatory action of these drugs in rheumatic diseases  is unclear. The following mechanisms have been proposed: suppression of  T-lymphocyte responses to mitogens, decreased leukocyte chemotaxis,  stabilization of lysosomal enzymes, inhibition of DNA and RNA synthesis, and the  trapping of free radicals.
Pharmacokinetics
Antimalarials are rapidly absorbed and  50% protein-bound in the plasma. They are very extensively tissue-bound,  particularly in melanin-containing tissues such as the eyes. The drugs are  deaminated in the liver and have blood elimination half-lives of up to 45  days.
Indications
Antimalarials are approved for  rheumatoid arthritis, but they are not considered very effective DMARDs.  Dose-response and serum concentration-response relationships have been  documented for hydroxychloroquine and dose-loading may increase rate of  response. Although antimalarials improve symptoms, there is no evidence that  these compounds alter bony damage in rheumatoid arthritis at their usual dosages  (up to 6.4 mg/kg/d for hydroxychloroquine or 200 mg/d for chloroquine). It  usually takes 3–6 months to obtain a response. Antimalarials are often used in  the treatment of the skin manifestations, serositis, and joint pains of systemic  lupus erythematosus, and they have been used in Sjögren's syndrome.
Adverse Effects
Although ocular toxicity may occur at dosages greater than 250 mg/d for chloroquine and greater than  6.4 mg/kg/d for hydroxychloroquine, it rarely occurs at lower doses.  Nevertheless, ophthalmologic monitoring every 6–12 months is advised. Other  toxicities include dyspepsia, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, rashes, and  nightmares. These drugs appear to be relatively safe in pregnancy.
Mechanism of Action
Cyclophosphamide's major active  metabolite is phosphoramide mustard, which cross-links DNA to prevent cell  replication. It suppresses T-cell and B-cell function by 30–40%; T-cell  suppression correlates with clinical response in the rheumatic diseases 
Indications
Cyclophosphamide is active against  rheumatoid arthritis when given orally at dosages of 2 mg/kg/d but not when  given intravenously. It is used regularly to treat systemic lupus erythematosus,  vasculitis, Wegener's granulomatosis, and other severe rheumatic diseases.
Mechanism of Action
Through regulation of gene  transcription, cyclosporine inhibits interleukin-1 and interleukin-2 receptor  production and secondarily inhibits macrophage–T-cell interaction and T-cell  responsiveness. T-cell-dependent B-cell function is also  affected.
Pharmacokinetics
Cyclosporine absorption is incomplete  and somewhat erratic, although a microemulsion formulation improves its  consistency and provides 20–30% bioavailability. Grapefruit juice increases  cyclosporine bioavailability by as much as 62%. Cyclosporine is metabolized by  CYP3A and consequently is subject to a large number of drug interactions.
Indications
Cyclosporine is approved for use in  rheumatoid arthritis and retards the appearance of new bony erosions. Its usual  dosage is 3–5 mg/kg/d divided into two doses. Anecdotal reports suggest that it  may be useful in systemic lupus erythematosus, polymyositis and dermatomyositis,  Wegener's granulomatosis, and juvenile chronic arthritis.
Adverse Effects
Cyclosporine has significant  nephrotoxicity, and its toxicity can be increased by drug interactions with  diltiazem, potassium-sparing diuretics, and other drugs inhibiting CYP3A. Serum  creatinine should be closely monitored. Other toxicities include hypertension,  hyperkalemia, hepatotoxicity, gingival hyperplasia, and hirsutism.
Mechanism of Action
Leflunomide undergoes rapid conversion,  both in the intestine and in the plasma, to its active metabolite, A77-1726.  This metabolite inhibits dihydroorotate dehydrogenase, leading to a decrease in  ribonucleotide synthesis and the arrest of stimulated cells in the G1  phase of cell growth. Consequently, leflunomide inhibits T-cell proliferation  and production of autoantibodies by B cells. Secondary effects include increases  of interleukin-10 receptor mRNA, decreased interleukin-8 receptor type A mRNA,  and decreased TNF- –dependent  nuclear factor kappa B (NF-  B)  activation.
Pharmacokinetics
Leflunomide is completely absorbed and  has a mean plasma half-life of 19 days. A77-1726, the active metabolite of  leflunomide, is thought to have approximately the same half-life and is subject  to enterohepatic recirculation. Cholestyramine can enhance leflunomide excretion  and increases total clearance by approximately 50%.
Indications
Leflunomide is as effective as  methotrexate in rheumatoid arthritis, including inhibition of bony damage. In  one study, combined treatment with methotrexate and leflunomide resulted in a  46.2% ACR20 response compared with 19.5% in patients receiving methotrexate  alone.
Adverse Effects
Diarrhea occurs in approximately 25% of  patients given leflunomide, although only about 3–5% discontinue the drug  because of this effect. Elevation in liver enzymes also occurs. Both effects can  be reduced by decreasing the dose of leflunomide. Other adverse effects  associated with leflunomide are mild alopecia, weight gain, and increased blood  pressure. Leukopenia and thrombocytopenia occur rarely. This drug is  contraindicated in pregnancy.
 Posted in:  Anti inflamatory drugsFriday, 8 April 2011
Sedative-Hypnotics Pharmacokinetics
The rates of oral absorption of  sedative-hypnotics differ depending on a number of factors, including  lipophilicity. For example, the absorption of triazolam is extremely rapid, and  that of diazepam and the active metabolite of clorazepate is more rapid than  other commonly used benzodiazepines. Clorazepate, a prodrug, is converted to its  active form, desmethyldiazepam (nordiazepam), by acid hydrolysis in the stomach.  Most of the barbiturates and other older sedative-hypnotics, as well as the  newer hypnotics (eszopiclone, zaleplon, zolpidem), are absorbed rapidly into the  blood following oral administration.
Lipid solubility plays a major role in  determining the rate at which a particular sedative-hypnotic enters the central  nervous system. This property is responsible for the rapid onset of central  nervous system effects of triazolam, thiopental, and the newer  hypnotics.
All sedative-hypnotics cross the  placental barrier during pregnancy. If sedative-hypnotics are given during the  predelivery period, they may contribute to the depression of neonatal vital  functions. Sedative-hypnotics are also detectable in breast milk and may exert  depressant effects in the nursing infant.
Metabolic transformation to more  water-soluble metabolites is necessary for clearance of sedative-hypnotics from  the body. The microsomal drug-metabolizing enzyme systems of the liver are most  important in this regard, so elimination half-life of these drugs depends mainly  on the rate of their metabolic transformation.
Hepatic metabolism accounts for the  clearance of all benzodiazepines. The patterns and rates of metabolism depend on  the individual drugs. Most benzodiazepines undergo microsomal oxidation (phase I  reactions), including N-dealkylation and aliphatic hydroxylation  catalyzed by cytochrome P450 isozymes, especially CYP3A4. The metabolites are  subsequently conjugated (phase II reactions) to form glucuronides that are  excreted in the urine. However, many phase I metabolites of benzodiazepines are  pharmacologically active, some with long half-lives. For example,  desmethyldiazepam, which has an elimination half-life of more than 40 hours, is  an active metabolite of chlordiazepoxide, diazepam, prazepam, and clorazepate.  Alprazolam and triazolam undergo -hydroxylation,  and the resulting metabolites appear to exert short-lived pharmacologic effects  because they are rapidly conjugated to form inactive glucuronides. The short  elimination half-life of triazolam (2–3 hours) favors its use as a hypnotic  rather than as a sedative drug.
 The formation of active metabolites has complicated studies on the  pharmacokinetics of the benzodiazepines in humans because the elimination  half-life of the parent drug may have little relation to the time course of  pharmacologic effects. Benzodiazepines for which the parent drug or active  metabolites have long half-lives are more likely to cause cumulative effects  with multiple doses. Cumulative and residual effects such as excessive  drowsiness appear to be less of a problem with such drugs as estazolam,  oxazepam, and lorazepam, which have relatively short half-lives and are  metabolized directly to inactive glucuronides.The metabolism of several  commonly used benzodiazepines including diazepam, midazolam, and triazolam is  affected by inhibitors and inducers of hepatic P450 isozyme. 
 
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1Time to peak blood level.
With the exception of phenobarbital,  only insignificant quantities of the barbiturates are excreted unchanged. The  major metabolic pathways involve oxidation by hepatic enzymes to form alcohols,  acids, and ketones, which appear in the urine as glucuronide conjugates. The  overall rate of hepatic metabolism in humans depends on the individual drug but  (with the exception of the thiobarbiturates) is usually slow. The elimination  half-lives of secobarbital and pentobarbital range from 18 to 48 hours in  different individuals. The elimination half-life of phenobarbital in humans is  4–5 days. Multiple dosing with these agents can lead to cumulative effects.
After oral administration of the  standard formulation, zolpidem reaches peak plasma levels in 1.6 hours. A  biphasic release formulation extends plasma levels by approximately 2 hours.  Zolpidem is rapidly metabolized to inactive metabolites via oxidation and  hydroxylation by hepatic cytochromes P450 including the CYP3A4 isozyme. The  elimination half-life of the drug is 1.5–3.5 hours, with clearance decreased in  elderly patients. Zaleplon is metabolized to inactive metabolites mainly by  hepatic aldehyde oxidase and partly by the cytochrome P450 isoform CYP3A4. The  half-life of the drug is about 1 hour. Dosage should be reduced in patients with  hepatic impairment and in the elderly. Cimetidine, which inhibits both aldehyde  dehydrogenase and CYP3A4, markedly increases the peak plasma level of zaleplon.  Eszopiclone is metabolized by hepatic cytochromes P450 (especially CYP3A4) to  form the inactive N-oxide derivative and weakly active  desmethyleszopiclone. The elimination half-life of eszopiclone is approximately  6 hours and is prolonged in the elderly and in the presence of inhibitors of  CYP3A4 (eg, ketoconazole). Inducers of CYP3A4 (eg, rifampin) increase the  hepatic metabolism of eszopiclone.
The water-soluble metabolites of  sedative-hypnotics, mostly formed via the conjugation of phase I metabolites,  are excreted mainly via the kidney. In most cases, changes in renal function do  not have a marked effect on the elimination of parent drugs. Phenobarbital is  excreted unchanged in the urine to a certain extent (20–30% in humans), and its  elimination rate can be increased significantly by alkalinization of the urine.  This is partly due to increased ionization at alkaline pH, since phenobarbital  is a weak acid with a pKa of 7.4.
The biodisposition of  sedative-hypnotics can be influenced by several factors, particularly  alterations in hepatic function resulting from disease or drug-induced increases  or decreases in microsomal enzyme activities.
In very old patients and in patients  with severe liver disease, the elimination half-lives of these drugs are often  increased significantly. In such cases, multiple normal doses of these  sedative-hypnotics can result in excessive central nervous system effects.
The activity of hepatic microsomal  drug-metabolizing enzymes may be increased in patients exposed to certain older  sedative-hypnotics on a long-term basis.  Barbiturates (especially phenobarbital) and meprobamate are most likely to cause  this effect, which may result in an increase in their hepatic metabolism as well  as that of other drugs. Increased biotransformation of other pharmacologic  agents as a result of enzyme induction by barbiturates is a potential mechanism  underlying drug interactions. In contrast, benzodiazepines and  the newer hypnotics do not change hepatic drug-metabolizing enzyme activity with  continuous use.
Opioid Analgesics Pharmacokinetics
Some properties of clinically important opioids are summarized in following table:
 
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1+++, ++, +, strong agonist; ±, partial agonist; –, ––,  antagonist.
Absorption
Most opioid analgesics are well  absorbed when given by subcutaneous, intramuscular, and oral routes. However,  because of the first-pass effect, the oral dose of the opioid (eg, morphine) may  need to be much higher than the parenteral dose to elicit a therapeutic effect.  Considerable interpatient variability exists in first-pass opioid metabolism,  making prediction of an effective oral dose difficult. Certain analgesics such  as codeine and oxycodone are effective orally because they have reduced  first-pass metabolism. Nasal insufflation of certain opioids can result in rapid  therapeutic blood levels by avoiding first-pass metabolism. Other routes of  opioid administration include oral mucosa via lozenges, and transdermal via  transdermal patches. The latter can provide delivery of potent analgesics over  days.
Distribution
The uptake of opioids by various organs  and tissues is a function of both physiologic and chemical factors. Although all  opioids bind to plasma proteins with varying affinity, the drugs rapidly leave  the blood compartment and localize in highest concentrations in tissues that are  highly perfused such as the brain, lungs, liver, kidneys, and spleen. Drug  concentrations in skeletal muscle may be much lower, but this tissue serves as  the main reservoir because of its greater bulk. Even though blood flow to fatty  tissue is much lower than to the highly perfused tissues, accumulation can be  very important, particularly after frequent high-dose administration or  continuous infusion of highly lipophilic opioids that are slowly metabolized,  eg, fentanyl.
Metabolism
The opioids are converted in large part  to polar metabolites (mostly glucuronides), which are then readily excreted by  the kidneys. For example, morphine, which contains free hydroxyl groups, is  primarily conjugated to morphine-3-glucuronide (M3G), a compound with  neuroexcitatory properties. The neuroexcitatory effects of M3G do not appear to  be mediated by receptors  but rather by the GABA/glycinergic system. In contrast, approximately 10% of  morphine is metabolized to morphine-6-glucuronide (M6G), an active metabolite  with analgesic potency four to six times that of its parent compound. However,  these relatively polar metabolites have limited ability to cross the blood-brain  barrier and probably do not contribute significantly to the usual CNS effects of  morphine given acutely. Nevertheless, accumulation of these metabolites may  produce unexpected adverse effects in patients with renal failure or when  exceptionally large doses of morphine are administered or high doses are  administered over long periods. This can result in M3G-induced CNS excitation  (seizures) or enhanced and prolonged opioid action produced by M6G. CNS uptake  of M3G and, to a lesser extent, M6G can be enhanced by coadministration with  probenecid or with drugs that inhibit the P-glycoprotein drug transporter. Like  morphine, hydromorphone is metabolized by conjugation, yielding  hydromorphone-3-glucuronide (H3G), which has CNS excitatory properties. However,  hydromorphone has not been shown to form significant amounts of a 6-glucuronide  metabolite.
The effects of these active metabolites  should be considered in patients with renal impairment before the administration  of morphine or hydromorphone, especially when given at high doses.
Esters (eg, heroin, remifentanil) are  rapidly hydrolyzed by common tissue esterases. Heroin (diacetylmorphine) is  hydrolyzed to monoacetylmorphine and finally to morphine, which is then  conjugated with glucuronic acid.
Hepatic oxidative metabolism is the  primary route of degradation of the phenylpiperidine opioids (meperidine,  fentanyl, alfentanil, sufentanil) and eventually leaves only small quantities of  the parent compound unchanged for excretion. However, accumulation of a  demethylated metabolite of meperidine, normeperidine, may occur in patients with  decreased renal function and in those receiving multiple high doses of the drug.  In high concentrations, normeperidine may cause seizures. In contrast, no active  metabolites of fentanyl have been reported. The P450 isozyme CYP3A4 metabolizes  fentanyl by N-dealkylation in the liver. CYP3A4 is also present in the  mucosa of the small intestine and contributes to the first-pass metabolism of  fentanyl when it is taken orally. Codeine, oxycodone, and hydrocodone undergo  metabolism in the liver by P450 isozyme CYP2D6, resulting in the production of  metabolites of greater potency. For example, codeine is demethylated to  morphine. Genetic polymorphism of CYP2D6 has been documented and linked to the  variation in analgesic response seen among patients. Nevertheless, the  metabolites of oxycodone and hydrocodone may be of minor consequence because the  parent compounds are currently believed to be directly responsible for the  majority of their analgesic actions. In the case of codeine, conversion to  morphine may be of greater importance because codeine itself has relatively low  affinity for opioid receptors. As a result, patients may experience either no  significant analgesic effect or an exaggerated response based on differences in  metabolic conversion. For this reason, routine use of codeine, especially in  pediatric age groups, is being reconsidered.
Excretion
Polar metabolites, including  glucuronide conjugates of opioid analgesics, are excreted mainly in the urine.  Small amounts of unchanged drug may also be found in the urine. In addition,  glucuronide conjugates are found in the bile, but enterohepatic circulation  represents only a small portion of the excretory process.



10:26
Mani