Effect of Food and Dosing Regimen on Safety and Efficacy of Proton Pump Inhibitors Therapy—A Literature Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Aspects of PPI Pharmacokinetics
3.2. Esomeprazole
3.2.1. Food Effect
3.2.2. Dosing Regimen
3.2.3. Administration Modes
3.3. Omeprazole
3.3.1. Food Effect
3.3.2. Omeprazole and Grapefruit Juice (GFJ) Consumption
3.3.3. Interaction with Cranberry Juice
3.3.4. Omeprazole and Alcohol Consumption
3.3.5. Dosing Regimen
3.3.6. Administration Modes
3.4. Pantoprazole
3.4.1. Food Effect
3.4.2. Dosing Regimen
3.4.3. Administration Modes
3.5. Rabeprazole
3.5.1. Food Effect
3.5.2. Dosing Regimen
3.5.3. Administration Modes
3.6. Lansoprazole
3.6.1. Food Effect
3.6.2. Lansoprazole and Grapefruit Juice Consumption
3.6.3. Lansoprazole and Alcohol Consumption
3.6.4. Dosing Regimen
3.6.5. Administration Modes
3.7. Dexlansoprazole
3.7.1. Food Effect
3.7.2. Dosing Regimen
3.7.3. Administration Modes
3.8. Limitations of Studies
- presence of the older studies—from the 1980s and 1990s,
- unavailable data—in some studies, PPI formulation was not mentioned, as well as the quantitative and/or qualitative meal composition, not every drug formulation was tested in the presence of food,
- the attendance of healthy volunteers in many of studies—such studies cannot be fully translated to the clinical practice,
- scarce data of PPI clinical effectiveness in the presence of food—the vast majority of studies focused on changes in pharmacokinetic parameters (e.g., AUC, Cmax, tmax) instead of more clinically relevant endpoints, such as response to treatment, symptoms alleviation or the lesion healing, limited data of PPI clinical effectiveness in different dosing regimens—only single studies evaluated the effect of PPI dosing regimen on nighttime syndromes, whereas the majority examined the changes in pharmacodynamic parameters (e.g., 24 h intragastric pH) that cannot fully reflect the clinical practice.
4. Summary
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Drug | Formulation | Food Effect | Recommended Intake Regarding Food | Recommended Dosing Regimen |
---|---|---|---|---|
Esomeprazole | DR capsules | after single dose: ↓ AUC (by 43–53%), ↓ Cmax (74–78%) [17,19,20,21], ↑ tmax (by 2.4–3 h) [16] after repeated doses: ↓ AUC (by 25%), ↓ Cmax (by 23%) [17] |
| |
DR granules for oral suspension | no studies found | |||
DR tablets | no studies found | |||
Omeprazole | IR capsules | ↓ AUC (by 24 and 28%, depending on the study), ↓ Cmax (by 47 and 63%, depending on the study) [32,34,35], ↑ tmax (by 0.6 h) [34,35] |
| |
IR powder for oral suspension | ↓ AUC (by 24%), ↓ Cmax (by 63%) [32] | |||
DR orally disintegrating tablets | ↓ AUC (by 19%), ↓ Cmax (by 56%), ↑ tmax (by 2 h) [40] | |||
DR capsules | ↓ AUC (by 35–38%) [34], ↓ Cmax (by 24–40% and 58–63%, depending on the study) [36,38], ↑ tmax (by 2 h) [36] | |||
DR granules for oral suspension | no studies found | |||
DR tablets | no significant changes in AUC and Cmax, ↑ tmax (by 1.3 h) [41] | |||
Pantoprazole | DR tablets | slightly ↓ AUC (by 17–25%), no significant changes in Cmax, ↑ tmax (by 4–5 h) [57] |
|
|
DR granules for oral suspension | ↓ AUC (by 29%), ↓ Cmax (by 51%), ↑ tmax (by 2 h) [56] | |||
Rabeprazole | DR capsules | ↓ AUC (by 27%), ↓ Cmax (by 55%), ↑ tmax (by 2 h) [65] |
| |
DR tablets | no significant changes in AUC and Cmax, ↑ tmax (by 2.5 h) [42] no significant changes in median intragastric pH [23,24] | |||
Lansoprazole | DR capsules | ↓ AUC and ↓ Cmax (both by 50%), ↑ tmax (by 1.5 h) [69] median intragastric pH not altered [73,74] |
|
|
DR orally disintegrating tablets | ↓ AUC (by 32%), ↓ Cmax (by 50%), ↑ tmax (by 1.3 h) [72] |
| ||
Dexlansoprazole | DDR capsules | not significant [87] |
|
|
DR orally disintegrating tablets | no significant changes in AUC, ↓ Cmax (by 38%), ↑ tmax (by 2 h) [89] |
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Wiesner, A.; Zwolińska-Wcisło, M.; Paśko, P. Effect of Food and Dosing Regimen on Safety and Efficacy of Proton Pump Inhibitors Therapy—A Literature Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 3527. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18073527
Wiesner A, Zwolińska-Wcisło M, Paśko P. Effect of Food and Dosing Regimen on Safety and Efficacy of Proton Pump Inhibitors Therapy—A Literature Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(7):3527. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18073527
Chicago/Turabian StyleWiesner, Agnieszka, Małgorzata Zwolińska-Wcisło, and Paweł Paśko. 2021. "Effect of Food and Dosing Regimen on Safety and Efficacy of Proton Pump Inhibitors Therapy—A Literature Review" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 7: 3527. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18073527