Glipizide Pharmacokinetics: Effects of Age, Diabetes, and Multiple Dosing

1989 
Aging and disease may contribute to alterations in drug pharmacokinetics. The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of aging, the presence of NIDDM, and multiple dosing on the pharmacokinetics of glipizide, an oral hypoglycemic drug. Ten healthy young men (under age 25), ten healthy older men (over age 65) and 15 older diabetic men ingested a single 5 mg tablet of glipizide after an overnight fast. Blood samples for measurement of serum glipizide were obtained over the next 24 hours. The study was repeated in the diabetics after 2 weeks of daily therapy. The mean values for Tmax (range 2.0–2.5 hours), Cmax (385–465 μg/l), and t1/2 (4.0–4.2 hours) were not significantly different in the three populations after single doses of glipizide. Several subjects in each population had slow absorption, with peak concentrations delayed for up to 12 hours. Only one elderly diabetic subject had evidence of drug accumulation at steady state. AUC, CI, Vgs and Varea were not significantly different in the three populations or at steady state, but there was a trend for AUC to be smaller and each of the other parameters to be increased in the older diabetics. The young subjects had a significantly higher fp (0.83%) than either of the two elderly groups (0.55–0.64%), but Clint did not differ between groups. Age, diabetes, and multiple dosing appear to have little effect on the pharmacokinetics of glipizide and should have little influence on the clinical response to this drug.
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