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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, March 1999, p. 678-680, Vol. 43, No. 3
0066-4804/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Influence of Renal Failure on Intestinal Clearance
of Ciprofloxacin in Rats
Sophie
Dautrey,1,2
Lydia
Rabbaa,3
Denise
Laouari,4
Bernard
Lacour,3
Claude
Carbon,1 and
Robert
Farinotti2,3,*
CRI no. 4 U 002D,1
Service de Pharmacie Clinique et des
Biomatériaux,2 and INSERM U
426,4 G. H. Bichat-C. Bernard, 75018 Paris, and Laboratoire de Pharmacie Clinique, Faculté
de Pharmacie de Paris XI, 92290 Chatenay
Malabry,3 France
Received 3 June 1998/Returned for modification 5 September
1998/Accepted 7 December 1998
 |
ABSTRACT |
Following intravenous doses, ciprofloxacin pharmacokinetics in
control and nephrectomized rats were studied. There were no differences between control and nephrectomized rats for area under the
concentration-time curve in plasma or biliary clearance. The intestinal
clearance of ciprofloxacin was increased in nephrectomized rats.
Intestinal elimination seems to compensate partially for the decrease
in urinary excretion of ciprofloxacin in nephrectomized rats.
 |
TEXT |
In humans, renal
clearance of ciprofloxacin represents 67% ± 11% of total
body clearance (5). Since metabolism and biliary excretion
account for the elimination of 15 and 1% of the dose administered,
respectively (1, 12), intestinal secretion of ciprofloxacin
may be important. Sörgel et al. (17) confirmed the
importance of intestinal secretion (10.6% following intravenous [i.v.] administration) in ciprofloxacin's overall disposition. Clinical studies carried out with patients with renal failure demonstrated a less pronounced decrease in ciprofloxacin total clearance than could have been expected from creatinine clearance values (5, 6, 8). This suggests the existence of
compensatory mechanisms for ciprofloxacin renal elimination. Rohwedder
et al. (13) identified the role of intestinal secretion in
the elimination of ciprofloxacin in patients with impaired renal function.
In animals, the intestinal elimination of ciprofloxacin was extensively
studied (9, 14, 16) with the ex vivo intestinal perfusion
model used by Schanker et al. (15). We have developed two
experimental models with biliary derivation (4) to evaluate the overall intestinal elimination of ciprofloxacin and the importance of its intestinal reabsorption in nephrectomized rats. To study the
influence of renal failure on the intestinal secretion of ciprofloxacin, we used an experimental model of surgically induced renal failure (2). We then compared the intestinal
elimination and the biliary excretion of ciprofloxacin in normal and
nephrectomized rats following the parenteral administration of
increasing doses of ciprofloxacin.
Materials and methods.
Ciprofloxacin hydrochloride was a
generous gift from Bayer (Puteaux, France). The intestinal perfusate
solution was a potassium phosphate buffer (0.15 M) (Prolabo, Paris,
France). The male Sprague-Dawley rats used in this study weighed
between 250 and 300 g at the time of the experiment (Charles
River, Saint Aubin Les Elbeufs, France).
Three weeks before the experiment, rats underwent an 80% nephrectomy
(2). Control rats underwent laparotomy only. Animals were on
a 20% casein dry food diet with a low sodium content. Rats were food
deprived for 12 h prior to the experiments; during the night,
water was given ad libitum.
To evaluate intestinal elimination, we used two distinct models. The
first model, with an open-intestinal perfusion (14), allowed the quantitation of overall intestinal elimination
(4). The second model, with intestinal loops, allowed the
estimation of net intestinal elimination, taking into account both
elimination and reabsorption processes. The isolated intestinal
segment was rinsed and then filled with perfusate and ligated at both
ends. After a 20-min equilibration period, ciprofloxacin was injected via the jugular vein. A predose blood sample was obtained to
measure plasma creatinine levels. Blood samples, via the carotid
artery, were then collected at regular intervals after the end of the ciprofloxacin injection. Rats were rehydrated by injection of saline
via the jugular vein. Bile and perfusate effluent in the open-intestinal perfusion model were collected. In the intestinal loop
model, overall loop contents were collected at the end of the
experiment (i.e., after 120 min), and the sac was flushed with the
perfusion solution.
Control and nephrectomized rats were compared in two experimental
protocols in order to study overall and net intestinal elimination. Ciprofloxacin was administered at 5, 12.5, 25, and 50 mg/kg of body
weight in control and nephrectomized rats; five animals were used per
dose level.
For the ciprofloxacin assay, the high-performance liquid
chromatography system was operated in the reversed-phase mode and coupled with fluorescence detection (14). Plasma creatinine was measured by an automated kinetic procedure according to the method
of Jaffé (Hitachi 717; Boehringer Mannheim, Meylan, France).
The area under the concentration-time curve (AUC) in plasma
over 120 min was calculated according to the trapezoidal rule (Siphar;
SIMED, Créteil, France). Overall and net intestinal clearances
and biliary clearance were obtained by dividing the amount of
ciprofloxacin eliminated over 120 min through the appropriate route by
the AUC in plasma.
The groups were compared by using a nonparametric Mann-Whitney test.
Statistical significance was fixed at P < 0.05. To
investigate the influence of the dose on AUC and biliary
excretion, statistical analyses were based on linear
regressions and correlation coefficients.
Results.
Plasma creatinine levels were twofold greater
in nephrectomized rats (96.5 ± 13.8 µmol/liter) than
in normal rats (51.5 ± 7.2 µmol/liter).
AUCs were not significantly different between control and
nephrectomized rats and were proportional to the dose administered.
The levels of biliary excretion of ciprofloxacin were not significantly
different between normal and nephrectomized rats (Table 1). Biliary clearance values were
constant, whatever the dose administered.
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TABLE 1.
Pharmacokinetics of ciprofloxacin over 120 min after
administration of increasing i.v. doses to control and
nephrectomized rats in the overall and net intestinal
elimination models
|
|
As deduced from the intestinal cumulative amounts eliminated and the
intestinal clearance values (Table 1), nephrectomized rats eliminated
more ciprofloxacin via the intestine than control rats at all doses but
5 mg/kg in the net intestinal elimination model.
Discussion.
Renal failure in rats led to a 2-fold increase in
plasma creatinine and a 10-fold decrease in ciprofloxacin's mean renal
clearance (about 55 µl/min versus 600 µl/min in control rats [data
not shown]). These results are in agreement with the data
observed in humans with severe renal failure (8) and
validate the experimental model of renal failure selected.
The investigation of ciprofloxacin pharmacokinetics showed that,
for each dose, AUCs in plasma were similar in both groups, and there
was a linear relationship between the dose administered (between 5 and
50 mg/kg) and AUCs in plasma.
Since plasma ciprofloxacin concentrations and biliary elimination were
proportional to the dose administered, one can conclude that total and
biliary eliminations of ciprofloxacin were not saturated at the doses
investigated, as in humans (10). In the same way, there was
no modification in ciprofloxacin renal clearance according to the
same doses administered (data not shown).
The overall and net intestinal clearances of ciprofloxacin were
significantly greater in nephrectomized rats than in control rats,
particularly at 50 mg/kg (approximately twofold). Nouaille-Degorce et
al. (11) also showed an increase of twofold in the nonrenal clearance of ciprofloxacin with the same model of renal failure in
awake rats. These results are consistent with what has been found in
humans (13) and suggest the existence of intestinal compensatory clearance mechanisms when renal function is compromised.
The investigation of overall and net intestinal fluxes with two models
evidences the importance of reabsorption processes, with net intestinal
clearances being two to four times lower than overall intestinal clearances.
The absence of proportionality between ciprofloxacin's overall
intestinal elimination and the dose administered of between 12.5 and 50 mg/kg suggests the existence of active intestinal secretion mechanisms
in addition to passive diffusion. The implication of active
transport mechanisms in the intestinal elimination of ciprofloxacin was
confirmed in vitro, in Caco-2 cells, when a saturable secretory efflux
was evidenced (3, 7). However, further investigations are
necessary to explain our results for the 5-mg/kg dose.
In conclusion, renal failure does not alter the biliary excretion of
ciprofloxacin in the rat. In contrast, its intestinal elimination is
increased, partially compensating for its decreased urinary excretion.
The exact mechanisms underlying the increased intestinal elimination of
ciprofloxacin in renal failure remain to be determined.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Service de
Pharmacie Clinique et des Biomatériaux, G. H. Bichat-C.
Bernard, 46, rue Henri Huchard, 75018 Paris, France. Phone:
33-1-40-25-80-05. Fax: 33-1-42-63-58-25. E-mail:
robert.farinotti{at}bch.ap-hop-paris.fr.
 |
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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, March 1999, p. 678-680, Vol. 43, No. 3
0066-4804/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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