Sr. Donahue et al., TICLOPIDINE INHIBITION OF PHENYTOIN METABOLISM MEDIATED BY POTENT INHIBITION OF CYP2C19, Clinical pharmacology and therapeutics, 62(5), 1997, pp. 572-577
A patient who had taken a stable dose of phenytoin for 2 years had a c
oronary stent placed for unstable angina and ticlopidine was added to
his therapeutic regimen. Twenty-five days later, he was hospitalized w
ith acute symptomatic phenytoin toxicity and a serum concentration of
46.5 mu g/ml. Determination of metabolic genotype revealed that the pa
tient had a wild-type genotype for CTP2C9, CTP2C19, and CTP2D6. Using
human liver microsomes, we showed that ticlopidine is a potent inhibit
or of cytochrome P450 2C19, with an estimated inhibition constant (K-i
) of 3.7 +/- 0.2 mu mol/L. The influence of ticlopidine on CYP2C9, the
other cytochrome P450 isoform that metabolizes phenytoin, is relative
ly weak, with a calculated K-i of 38.8 +/- 27 mu mol/L. These data sug
gest that, in this patient, phenytoin toxicity was caused by inhibitio
n of CYP2C19 by ticlopidine, and the data emphasize the importance of
CYP2C19 in the metabolism of phenytoin.