Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Encainide disposition in patients with chronic cirrhosis

25

Citations

0

References

1986

Year

Abstract

The antiarrhythmic agent encainide undergoes extensive first-pass hepatic metabolism after oral dosing. The active metabolites O-desmethylencainide and 3-methoxy-O-desmethylencainide are formed in subjects who are extensive metabolizers (EMs), a phenotypic trait that cosegregates with that of debrisoquin. Because of the possibility that drug metabolism is altered by liver dysfunction, the disposition of encainide and its metabolites was studied in six such EMs with cirrhosis and compared with that in eight normal subjects of the same phenotype. Patients with cirrhosis had lower systemic and oral clearances of encainide, resulting in a threefold increase in oral bioavailability. The plasma concentration of encainide was significantly higher among the patients with cirrhosis, whereas the plasma levels of the respective metabolites were comparable with those in normal subjects, resulting in no change in the patient's ECG intervals. Encainide is, therefore, an example of a drug in which cirrhosis causes a three- to fourfold increase in parent drug concentrations. However, because no change occurs in the levels of the pharmacologically active metabolites, dosage adjustment is probably not required in patients with cirrhosis.