The effects of triptolide on the pharmacokinetics of sorafenib in rats and its potential mechanism

37Citations
Citations of this article
23Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Context: Combining sorafenib with triptolide could inhibit tumour growth with greater efficacy than sin-gle-agent treatment. However, their herb–drug interaction remains unknown. Objective: This study investigates the herb–drug interaction between triptolide and sorafenib. Materials and methods: The effects of triptolide (10 mg/kg) on the pharmacokinetics of different doses of sorafenib (20, 50 and 100 mg/kg) in rats, and blood samples were collected within 48 h and evaluated using LC-MS/MS. The effects of triptolide on the absorption and metabolism of sorafenib were also investigated using Caco-2 cell monolayer model and rat liver microsome incubation systems. Results: The results showed that the Cmax (low dose: 72.38 ± 8.76 versus 49.15 ± 5.46 ng/mL; medium dose: 178.65 ± 21.05 versus 109.31 ± 14.17 ng/mL; high dose: 332.81 ± 29.38 versus 230.86 ± 9.68 ng/mL) of sorafenib at different doses increased significantly with the pretreatment of triptolide, and while the oral clearance rate of sorafenib decreased. The t1/2 of sorafenib increased significant (p < 0.05) from 9.02 ± 1.16 to 12.17 ± 2.95 h at low dose with the pretreatment of triptolide. Triptolide has little effect on the absorption of sorafenib in Caco-2 cell transwell model. However, triptolide could significantly decrease the intrinsic clearance rate of sorafenib from 51.7 ± 6.37 to 32.4 ± 4.43 lL/min/mg protein in rat liver microsomes. Discussion and conclusions: These results indicated that triptolide could change the pharmacokinetic profiles of sorafenib in rats; these effects might be exerted via decreasing the intrinsic clearance rate of sorafenib in rat liver.

Author supplied keywords

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Wang, X., Zhang, X., Liu, F., Wang, M., & Qin, S. (2017). The effects of triptolide on the pharmacokinetics of sorafenib in rats and its potential mechanism. Pharmaceutical Biology, 55(1), 1863–1867. https://doi.org/10.1080/13880209.2017.1340963

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free