Background: Renal allograft survival is lower in African American patients
compared with white patients. Interethnic differences in cyclosporine (INN,
ciclosporin) pharmacokinetics in renal transplant recipients have been des
cribed but have not been well characterized. Pharmacodynamic responses to c
yclosporine have not been compared among ethnic groups.
Methods: Healthy men were studied after 5 days on a controlled diet. Cyclos
porine concentrations were determined in whole blood drawn at intervals ove
r 24 hours after administration of a microemulsion cyclosporine formulation
(4 mg/kg; 9 African American subjects and 9 white subjects) and after a st
andard cyclosporine formulation (4 mg/kg; 10 African American subjects and
10 white subjects). Inhibition of phytohemagglutinin-P-stimulated interleuk
in-2 production in whole blood drawn 4 hours after cyclosporine was used as
a pharmacodynamic measure to compare the effect of cyclosporine in African
American and white subjects.
Results: The microemulsion cyclosporine formulation (area under the cyclosp
orine concentration-time curve, 7432 +/- 560 ng . h/mL in African American
subjects and 7043 +/- 454 ng . h/mL in white subjects) was more bioavailabl
e than the standard formulation (area under the cyclosporine concentration-
time curve, 4828 +/- 319 ng . h/mL in African American subjects and 4538 +/
- 301 ng . h/mL in white subjects); this resulted in an approximately 50% g
reater area under the cyclosporine concentration-time curve (P <.001 in bot
h ethnic groups). There were no differences between African American subjec
ts and white subjects in any pharmacokinetic measurement, with both the sta
ndard and the microemulsion cyclosporine formulations. Inhibition of phytoh
emagglutinin-P-stimulated interleukin-2 production 4 hours after the admini
stration of cyclosporine was similar in African American subjects (70% <plu
s/minus> 5% inhibition) and white subjects (64% +/- 7% inhibition; P=.5).
Conclusions: The pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of cyclosporine were
similar in a matched group of African American and white subjects studied
under controlled conditions. Environmental factors may contribute more than
genetic variability to the lower bioavailability of cyclosporine reported
in African American renal transplant recipients.