Mephenytoin hydroxylation deficiency in Caucasians: Frequency of a new oxidative drug metabolism polymorphism

P J Wedlund(Vanderbilt University), W S Aslanian(Vanderbilt University), C B McAllister, G. Wilkinson(Vanderbilt University), Robert A. Branch(Vanderbilt University)
Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics
December 1, 1984
Cited by 265

Abstract

The ability of normal subjects to hydroxylate mephenytoin (100 mg) or debrisoquine (10 mg) after oral dosing was investigated in 156 unrelated Caucasians living in middle Tennessee. Urinary recovery of 4-hydroxymephenytoin (4-OH-M) and the urinary S:R enantiomeric ratio of mephenytoin measured in an 8-hr urine sample were investigated as phenotypic traits for mephenytoin, and the urinary metabolic ratio of debrisoquine was used to determine the debrisoquine hydroxylase phenotype. Both urinary 4-OH-M and the S:R ratio of mephenytoin discriminated between extensive (EM) and poor (PM) metabolizers of mephenytoin. The frequencies of PMs for mephenytoin and debrisoquine hydroxylation activity were 2.6% and 7.0%. These two defects in oxidative metabolism were not observed in the same subjects, which suggests that 4-hydroxylation of mephenytoin is a new polymorphism independent of that for debrisoquine.


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