Abstract
We evaluated the pharmacokinetic interaction between a low-hyperforin St John’s wort
(SJW) extract and alprazolam, caffeine, tolbutamide, and digoxin. Previous reports
on other SJW products had shown remarkably decreased plasma concentrations of certain
co-medicated drugs, which was attributed to an inducing effect of SJW on cytochrome
P-450 (CYP) and p-glycoprotein (p-gp) activity. Two randomised, placebo-controlled
studies were performed with 28 healthy volunteers (age 18 - 55 years) in each study.
In study A, single doses of alprazolam (1 mg; substrate of CYP3A4) and caffeine (100
mg; CYP1A2) were given on days 1 and 11. In study B, single doses of tolbutamide (500
mg, days 1 and 11; CYP2C9) and multiple doses of digoxin (0.75 mg on days -2 and -1,
0.25 mg/die on days 1 to 11; p-gp) were given. The participants received SJW (Esbericum®
capsules; 240 mg/die of extract, 3.5 mg hyperforin) or placebo on days 2 to 11. Blood
for pharmacokinetic analysis was drawn on days 1 and 11. No statistically significant
differences were found in the primary kinetic parameter, AUC0 - 24, of alprazolam, caffeine (AUC0 - 12), paraxanthine, tolbutamide, 4-hydroxytolbutamide, and digoxin between the placebo
group and the SJW group at the end of the study. The SJW-induced change in AUCs was
less than 12 % of the initial median AUC of the participants in studies A and B, thus
clinically irrelevant. On day 11, trough concentrations were 2.0 (range 0.6 - 4.1)
μg/L and 1.0 (0.2 - 3.9) μg/L for hypericin and pseudohypericin, respectively, whereas
hyperforin concentrations were below the quantification limit (< 1 μg/L). Kinetics
of investigated probe drugs were only marginally influenced by concomitant treatment
with Esbericum® capsules. This may be due in particular to the low hyperforin plasma
concentration as this SJW component has been shown to activate the PXR receptor which
regulates expression of CYP3A4 and p-gp. Our findings corroborate the view that reports
about interactions of other SJW extracts seem not to be predictive for the product
we studied.
Key words
St. John’s wort -
Hypericum perforatum
- Clusiaceae - interaction - clinical trial - drug safety
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Dr. rer. nat. Michael Friede
Schaper & Bruemmer GmbH & Co. KG
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