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Vol. 25, Issue 11, 1282-1287, 1997
Departments of Drug Metabolism (S.K.B., X.X., R.D.A., R.R.M., B.H.A., G.A.D., M.C., J.D.R., J.H.L., T.A.B.) and Clinical Pharmacology (A.F., S.D.H., J.I.S., B.J.G.), Merck Research Laboratories; Department of Medicinal Chemistry, Merck Frosst Centre for Therapeutics (C.D.); Clinical Pharmacology Associates (K.C.L.); and Department of Medicine, UCSD Medical Center at San Diego (V.P., M.A.K., J.I.I.), University of California, San Diego
Montelukast sodium
[1-{[(1(R)-(3-(2-(7-chloro-2-quinolinyl)-(E)-
ethenyl)phenyl)-3-(2-(1-hydroxy-1-methylethyl)phenyl)propyl)thio]methyl}cyclopropylacetic acid sodium salt] (MK-476, Singulair) is a potent and selective antagonist of the cysteinyl leukotriene (Cys-LT1) receptor
and is under investigation for the treatment of bronchial asthma. To
assess the metabolism and excretion of montelukast, six healthy subjects received single oral doses of 102 mg of
[14C]montelukast, and the urine and feces
were collected. Most of the radioactivity was recovered in feces, with
0.2% appearing in urine. Based on these results and the reported
modestly high oral bioavailability of montelukast, it could be
concluded that a major part of the radioactivity was excreted
via bile. A second clinical study was conducted to identify
biliary metabolites of montelukast. The bile was aspirated using a
modified procedure involving a nasogastric tube placed fluoroscopically
near the ampulla of Vater, after an oral dose of 54.8 mg of
[14C]montelukast. This technique appears to
be a new application for drug metabolism studies. The study was
conducted with fasted and nonfasted subjects, with the bile being
aspirated continuously under suction over periods of 2-8 hr and 8-12
hr after the dose, respectively. Two hours before the end of the
collection procedure, cholecystokinin carboxyl-terminal octapeptide was
administered iv to stimulate gallbladder contraction. Plasma samples
also were collected periodically over 10 hr. Due to the nature of the
collection procedure and the limited sampling time, recovery of
radioactivity in bile was incomplete and varied from 3 to 20% of the
dose. Radiochromatographic and LC-MS/MS analyses of bile showed the
presence of one major and several minor metabolites, along with small
amounts of unchanged parent drug. The minor metabolites were
identified, by LC-MS/MS comparison with synthetic standards or by NMR,
as acyl glucuronide (M1), sulfoxide (M2), 25-hydroxy (a phenol, M3),
21-hydroxy (diastereomers of a benzylic alcohol, M5a and M5b), and
36-hydroxy (diastereomers of a methyl alcohol, M6a and M6b) analogs of
montelukast. The major metabolite was characterized as a dicarboxylic
acid (M4), a product of further oxidation of the hydroxymethyl
metabolite M6. Chiral LC-MS/MS analyses of M4 revealed that this
diacid, like M5 and M6, was formed in both diastereomeric forms. The
levels of metabolites in the systemic circulation were low in the fed as well as fasted subjects, with <2% of the circulating radioactivity being due to metabolites M5a, M5b, M6a, and M6b. Overall, this bile
aspiration technique, which is less invasive than either T-tube
drainage or fine-needle percutaneous puncture, provided a convenient
and expedient means of identifying the biliary metabolites of
montelukast, relatively free of contributions from colonic microflora.
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