Pharmacokinetics of Intrvenous Alendronate

1999 
Alendronate is a potent bisphosphonate that has been studied for the treatment of osteoporosis and Paget's disease of the bone. To examine the pharmacokinetics of this drug, several groups of postmenopausal women were dosed intravenously in several studies. Twelve patients with metastatic bone disease were administered an intravenous dose of 10 mg of 14 C-labeled alendronate (-26 μCi), and plasma, feces, and urine samples were collected for 72 hours. Radioactivity was excreted almost exclusively in urine, and all of it was accounted for by alendronate. Overall recovery accounted for 47% of dose, with the remainder presumed to be retained in bone. Metabolism of alendronate was not observed. Renal clearance of alendronate was 71 mL/min. An additional 10 subjects were given repeated IV administrations of alendronate to demonstrate that previous exposure does not alter the pharmacokinetic behavior of the drug. Examination of the findings from these and other studies in which alendronate was administered intravenously revealed that disposition of single doses is linear in the range of 0.125 to 10 mg. With the possible exception of a somewhat greater skeletal retention of a systemically administered dose, thepharmacokinetics of IV alendronate were found to be similar to those of other bisphosphonates.
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