A physiological pharmacokinetic model describing the disposition of lycopene in healthy men

Veda Diwadkar‐Navsariwala(University of Illinois Chicago), Janet A. Novotny(United States Department of Agriculture), David M. Gustin(University of Chicago), Jeffery A. Sosman(Vanderbilt University), Keith A. Rodvold(University of Illinois Chicago), James A. Crowell(National Cancer Institute), Maria Stacewicz‐Sapuntzakis(University of Illinois Chicago), Phyllis E. Bowen(University of Illinois Chicago)
Journal of Lipid Research
October 1, 2003
Cited by 100Open Access
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Abstract

A physiological pharmacokinetic model was developed to describe the disposition of lycopene, delivered as a tomato beverage formulation in five graded doses (10, 30, 60, 90, or 120 mg), for a phase I study in healthy male subjects (five per dose). Blood was collected before dose administration (0 h) and at scheduled intervals until 672 h. Serum concentrations of carotenoids and vitamins were measured by high performance liquid chromatography analysis. The model was comprised of seven compartments: gastrointestinal tract, enterocytes, chylomicrons, plasma lipoproteins, fast-turnover liver, slow-turnover tissues, and a delay compartment before the enterocytes. As predicted, the percent absorption at the 10 mg dose (33.9 +/- 8.1%) was significantly greater than at the higher doses; however, the amount of lycopene absorbed (mg) was not statistically different (mean: 4.69 +/- 0.55 mg) between doses, suggesting a possible saturation of absorptive mechanisms. The slow-turnover tissue compartment served as a slow-depleting reservoir for lycopene, and the liver represented the fast-turnover pool. Independent of dose, 80% of the subjects absorbed less than 6 mg of lycopene. This may have important implications for planning clinical trials with pharmacological doses of lycopene in cancer control and prevention if absorption saturation occurs at levels that are already being consumed in the population.


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