Nonspecific NSAIDs
Classifications of nonspecific NSAIDs
- Carboxylic acids
* Acetylated = aspirin
* Nonacetylated = sodium salicylate, salicylamide, diflunisal
- Acetic acid
* Indomethacin, sulindac, tolmetin
- Propionic acid
* Ibuprofen, naproxen, fenoprofen, ketoprofen
- Enolic acid
* Phenylbutazone, piroxicam
- Pyrrolopyrrole
* Ketorolac
Pharmacokinetics of nonspecific NSAIDs in general
Absorption
- Well absorbed from GIT
- Low first-pass hepatic extraction
- Only parecoxib is available for IV/IM administration
Distribution
- Highly protein bound (>95%) to plasma albumin
- Small Vd
Physicochemical properties
NB:
- Acidic NSAIDs becomes sequestered preferentially in the synovial tissue of inflamed joints
Selected examples of nonspecific NSAIDs by classification
Carboxylic acid
Acetylated carboxylic acid
See Aspirin
Nonacetylated carboxylic acid
Diflunisal
- Analgesic, antipyretic, and antiinflammatory
- Mostly antiarthritic
* Not very antipyretic
- Also affect platelet function and bleeding time
* But reversible, unlike aspirin
Acetic acid
Indomethacin
- Methylated indole derivative
- Analgesic, antipyretic, antiinflammatory
* Comparable to salicylates
* One of the most potent COX inhibitors
* Comparable to colchicine in antiinflammatory potency in acute gout
- Drug of choice in ankylosing spondylitis
- Also used for closing patent ductus arteriosus
- Could be used as initial treatment of Reiter's syndrome
- More effective than aspirin in treatment of dysmenorrhoea
- Side effects
* GIT disturbance and severe frontal headaches are common
* Inhibition of platelet aggregation
* Renal and hepatic toxicity possible
* Neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and aplastic anaemia are rare
Sulindac
- Substituted analogue of indomethacin
- A prodrug
--> Reduced to the sulfide form (active metabolite)
- Similar analgesic, antipyretic, and antiinflammatory effects
- Active metabolite is cleared slowly from plasma
* Elimination half-time = 16 hours
- Side effects:
* GIT disturbane
* Renal dysfunction
* Altered liver function test
* Inhibition of platelet aggregation
Tolmetin
- More potent than salicylates, but less potent than indomethacin
- Rapid oral absorption
- Extensive protein-binding (99%)
- Inactivated by decarboxylation
Propionic acid derivatives
Include:
* Ibuprofen
* Naproxen
* Diclofenac
Prominent analgesic, antipyretic, and antiinflammatory effects
- Naproxen
* Unique in its long elimination half-life
* Twice daily dosing
* Metabolised by dealkylation by CYP450
* <10% excreted unchanged in urine
- Ibuprofen
* Primarily eliminated by metabolism to hydroxyl or carboxyl conjugates
* <1% excreted unchanged in urine
- Diclofenac
* Metabolised to glucuronide, hydroxy, and sulphate conjugates
* 90% of clearance within 3 to 4 hours
Side effects
- GIT irritation and mucosal ulceration
* But less severe than salicylates
- Some inhibition of platelet function
- May exacerbate renal dysfunction
- Cross-reaction with hypersensitivity to salicylates
Drug interaction
- Increased warfarin effect
* Due to extensive plasma protein binding
* Ibuprofen does NOT increase warfarin effect, possibly because it only occupies a small number of binding sites on albumin
- Haematopoietic suppression occurs with chronic use of ibuprofen
--> Agranulocytosis, bone marrow granulocytic aplasia
Diclofenac
[MCQ:Q248]
- 99% protein bound (mosting albumin)
- 50% first pass metabolism
- Peak concentration = 10 - 30 min
- Metabolised by hydroxylation and conjugation
- Elimination halflife = 1.5 hours
- Clearance = 3 mL/kg/min
Enolic acid
Phenylbutazone
- Effective antiinflammatory
- Useful in treatment of acute gout and rheumatoid arthritis
* An effective alternative to colchicine (control in 85% of patients within 24-36 hours)
- Toxicity (see "Side effects")
* Not be used for longer than 7 days
* Not to be used for analgesic and antipyretic (better alternatives available)
- Rapid oral absorption
- 98% protein binding
- Oxyphenbutazone
* A metabolite with antiinflammatory action similar to the parent drug
- Slow excretion
* Elimination half-time = 50-100 hours
* Significant concentration in synovial spaces for up to 3 weeks after discontiuation
NB:
[MCQ:Q258]
- Phenylbutazone is a useless drug which is commonly asked in exams
Side effects
- Frequent severe side effects
* Anaemia
* Agranulocytosis
- N&V, epigastric discomfort, skin rashes are common
- Sodium retention
* Due to reversible direct effect on renal tubules
--> Plasma volume increases and pulmonary oedema possible
Interaction
- Displace other drugs, and thus increasing their effects
* Warfarin, oral hypoglycaemics, sulfonamides, thyroid hormones
- Decreases uptake of iodine by thyroid gland
Piroxicam
- Differ from other NSAIDs chemically
* But similar in pharmacological actions
- Extensive protein binding
--> May increase the actions of other drugs such as aspirin and oral anticoagulants
Pyrrolopyrrole
Ketorolac
- Potent analgesic effect
- Moderate antiinflammatory effect (when given IM or IV)
- Likely that ketorolac potentiate the antinociceptive actions of opioids
- Ketorolac 30mg IM is equivalent to:
* 10mg of morphine, or
* 100mg of pethidine
- After IM, peak plasma concentration is achieved within 45-60 minutes
- Elimination half-time is about 5 hours
- Protein-binding > 99%
- Metabolised principally by glucuronic acid conjugation
Side effects
- Side effect profile is similar to other NSAIDs
- Inhibition of platelet aggregation
- Life-threatening bronchospasm can occur
* At-risk patients include asthma, aspirin sensitivity, and nasal polyposis
- GIT irritation, N&V, sedation, peripheral oedema can occur
- Without preexisting renal disease and dehydration, ketorolac is not likely to cause renal toxicity
Other antiarthritis drugs
Colchicine
- Decreases inflammation and pain in acute gout
* Only useful as treatment and prophylaxis of acute gout attacks
- Effect within 24-48 hours of oral administration
- Colchine is NOT an analgesic and does NOT provide relief against other types of pain or inflammation
- Oral colchicine should be stopped when GIT symptoms appear
Mechanism of action
- Does NOT influence renal excretion of uric acid
- Changes fibrillar microtubules in granulocytes
--> Inhibition of granulocytes migrating into inflammed areas
--> Inhibition of inflammatory response evoked by sodium urate crystal deposited in joint tissues
Side effects
- N&V, diarrhoea, and abdominal pain (in 80% of patients)
- Enhancement of CNS depressants and sympathomimetics
- Depression of medullary ventilatory centre
- Severe toxicity --> Bone marrow depression with leukopenia and thrombocytopenia
Allopurinol
- Preferred drug for primary hyperuricaemia of gout and hyperuricaemia during chemotherapy
- Rapid absorbed orally
- Metabolised to oxypurinol
* Also an inhibitor of xanthine oxidase
* Longer elimination half-time (21 hours) than parent drug (1.3 hours for allopurinol)
Mechanism of action
- Does NOT influence renal excretion of uric acid either
- Allopurinol interferes with the final steps of uric acid synthesis
* By inhibiting xanthine oxidase (which converts xanthine to uric acid)
Side effects
- Most common side effect = maculopapular rash
* Essentially an immune complex dermatitis
* Often preceded by pruritus
* Pruritus is an indication to discontinue therapy
- Fever and myalgia
- Allopurinol can act as a hapten
--> Nephritis, vasculitis, maculopapular rash
- Hepatic dysfunction with elevated transaminase enzyme is common
- Allopurinol inhibits the enzymatic inactivation of 6-mercaptopurine and azathioprine
--> These drugs need to be reduced in dosage
- Allopurinol also inhibits hepatic enzymes
--> Increased effect of some drugs (e.g. oral anticoagulants)
NB:
- Hapton = small molecule which can elicit an immune response only when attached to a large carrier such as protein
Uricosuric drugs
- Uricosuric drugs act directly on renal tubules to increase the rate of excretion of uric acid and other organic acids (e.g. penicillin)
Probenecid
- Completely absorbed after oral administration
- Peak plasma concentration in 2-4 hours
- Elimination half-time = 8 hours
- Protein-binding = 90%
- Probenecid 1g/day in 4 divided doses
--> Effectively block the renal excretion of penicillin
- Probenecid also decreases biliary excretion of rifampin
--> Higher plasma concentration of rifampin (thus great anti-tuberculosis effect)
- Salicylate antagonise the uricosuric action of probenecid but not its capacity to inhibit renal tubular excretion of penicillin
- Mild allergic reactions (cutaneous rashes) occur in 2-4%
Sulfinpyrazone
- Related to phenylbutazone
* Lacks antiinflammatory effect
- Potent inhibitor of renal tubular reabsorption of uric acid
--> Antagonised by salicylates
- Renal tubular secretion of many drugs also decreased
--> Greater effect of oral hypoglycaemics
- Protein-binding around 98%
- Sulfinpyrazone undergoes proximal renal tubular secretion
- 90% excreted unchanged in urine
- Metabolised to parahydroxyl analogue
--> Also has uricosuric activity
- Side effects
* GIT irritation in 10-15%
* Inhibition of platelet function