Bicalutamide
- 1 January 2004
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Clinical Pharmacokinetics
- Vol. 43 (13) , 855-878
- https://doi.org/10.2165/00003088-200443130-00003
Abstract
Bicalutamide is a nonsteroidal pure antiandrogen given at a dosage of 150mg once daily as monotherapy for the treatment of early (localised or locally advanced) nonmetastatic prostate cancer. It is used at a dosage of 50mg once daily in combination with a luteinising hormone-releasing hormone analogue or surgical castration for the treatment of advanced prostate cancer. Bicalutamide is a racemate and its antiandrogenic activity resides almost exclusively in the (R)-enantiomer, with little, if any, activity in the (S)-enantiomer. (R)-Bicalutamide is slowly and saturably absorbed, but absorption is unaffected by food. It has a long plasma elimination half-life (1 week) and accumulates about 10-fold in plasma during daily administration. (S)-Bicalutamide is much more rapidly absorbed and cleared from plasma; steady-state concentrations (Css) of (R)-bicalutamide are 100-fold higher than those of (S)-bicalutamide. Css increases linearly with doses up to 50mg, but nonlinearly at higher doses, reaching a plateau above 300mg. Css is higher in Japanese than in Caucasians, but no relationship with degree of renal impairment, bodyweight or age exists. Although mild-to-moderate hepatic impairment does not affect pharmacokinetics, there is evidence for slower elimination of (R)-bicalutamide in subjects with severe hepatic impairment. Bicalutamide metabolites are excreted almost equally in urine and faeces with little or no unchanged drug excreted in urine; conversely, unchanged drug predominates in plasma. Bicalutamide in faeces is thought to arise from hydrolysis of bicalutamide glucuronide and from unabsorbed drug. Bicalutamide appears to be cleared almost exclusively by metabolism; this is largely mediated by cytochrome P450 (CYP) for (R)-bicalutamide, but glucuronidation is the predominant metabolic route for (S)-bicalutamide. (S)-Bicalutamide is metabolised in vitro by CYP3A4, and it is probable that this isoenzyme is also responsible for the metabolism of (R)-bicalutamide. In vitro data suggest that (R)-bicalutamide has the potential to inhibit CYP3A4 and, to a lesser extent, CYP2C9, 2C19 and 2D6. However, using midazolam as a specific CYP3A4 marker, no clinically relevant inhibition is observed in vivo with bicalutamide 150mg. Although bicalutamide is a CYP inducer in laboratory animals, dosages ≤150 mg/day have shown no evidence of enzyme induction in humans. Daily administration of bicalutamide increases circulating levels of gonadotrophins and sex hormones; although testosterone increases by up to 80%, concentrations in most patients remain within the normal range. Bicalutamide produces a dose-related decrease in prostate-specific antigen (PSA) at dosages ≤150 mg/day. However, little relationship is observed between median PSA reduction and (R)-bicalutamide Css.Keywords
This publication has 88 references indexed in Scilit:
- Clinical Pharmacokinetics of PravastatinClinical Pharmacokinetics, 2000
- Bicalutamide and Flutamide, Each in Combination with Luteinizing Hormone‐Releasing Hormone Analogs, in Advanced Prostate Cancer: Exploratory Analysis of Impact of Extent of Disease by Bone Scan on OutcomeThe Prostate Journal, 2000
- Effects of the Antifungal Agents on Oxidative Drug MetabolismClinical Pharmacokinetics, 2000
- Enzyme-inducing effects of bicalutamide in mouse, rat and dogXenobiotica, 1998
- Bicalutamide in Advanced Prostate CancerDrugs & Aging, 1998
- Clinical Pharmacokinetics of the Antiandrogens and Their Efficacy in Prostate CancerClinical Pharmacokinetics, 1998
- In Vitro Prediction of the Terfenadine‐Ketoconazole Pharmacokinetic InteractionThe Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1994
- Correlation between oral drug absorption in humans and apparent drug permeability coefficients in human intestinal epithelial (Caco-2) cellsBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1991
- The pharmacokinetics of Casodex in laboratory animalsXenobiotica, 1991
- Monoethylglycinexylidide Formation Kinetics: A Novel Approach to Assessment of Liver Functioncclm, 1987