S-Mephenytoin hydroxylation phenotypes in a Jordanian population*
β Scribed by Hadidi, Hakam F.; Irshaid, Yacoub M.; Woosley, Raymond L.; Idle, Jeffrey R.; Flockhart, David A.
- Publisher
- Nature Publishing Group
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 650 KB
- Volume
- 58
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0009-9236
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
S-Mephenytoin hydroxylation phenotypes in a Jordanian population
We tested the ability of 194 unrelated, healthy Jordanian volunteers to metabolize Smephenytoin. Mephenytoin (100 mg) was coadmmistered with debrisoquin (10 mg) orally and urine was collected for 8 hours. Mephenytoin metabolism was tested according to three measures: the amount of 4-hydroxymephenytoin, the S/R enantiomeric ratio, and the presence of a polar, acid-labile metabolite in urine collected for 8 hours after the dose. The S/R ratio and the presence of the acid-labile metabolite were determined in the urine of 16 patients who had low amounts of 4-hydroxymephenytoin (log hydroxylation index ~1). On examination of these three parameters of oxidation status, nine subjects were found to be poor metabolizers of mephenytoin by all three parameters. Thus 4.6% (95% confidence interval of 1.6% to 7.6%) of Jordanian subjects studied were poor metabolizers of mephenytoin. According to the Hardy-Weinberg Law, the frequency of the recessive autosomal gene controlling the poor metabolizer status of mephenytoin was predicted to be 0.215% (95% confidence interval of 0.146% to 0.283%). These results are on the same order of magnitude as those determined in European white populations and constitute the first report in Arab populations.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
To examine whether a drug-metabolizing enzyme changes with normal aging, the S:R index of S-mephenytoin 4-hydroxylation was determined in 150, unmedicated elderly Americans (mean age 75.4). Ten (6.7%) were identified as categorically slow metabolizers (S:R ratios greater than or equal to .95). This
European data on the polymorphic metabolism of debrisoquine, sparteine, dextromethorphan and mephenytoin have been collected. No significant difference in phenotype frequencies was found between the separate series for debrisoquine, sparteine and dextromethorphan, which supports the claim that these