Pharmacokinetics of three oral formulations of ciprofloxacin

Abstract
We compared the absorption of three formulations of ciprofloxacin after oral administration in 18 normal adult male volunteers. Each subject received 500 mg of ciprofloxacin as two 250-mg tablets, one 500-mg tablet, or a solution in a randomized crossover sequence. Pharmacokinetic parameters were determined by model independent methods. Because a solution is considered to be the ideal oral dosage form, the results determined for the tablets were compared to those for the solution. Mean values for the maximum concentration of drug in serum, the time to maximum concentration of drug in serum, and the elimination half-life were 3.23 micrograms/ml, 1.00 h, and 5.04 h, respectively, for the solution. The mean renal clearance of ciprofloxacin was 372 ml/min and accounted for at least 50% of the total clearance. We recovered 44.4, 48.6, and 55.8% of the administered ciprofloxacin from the urine as unchanged drug within 24 h after dosing with the 250-mg tablets, 500-mg tablets, or solution, respectively. The 500-mg tablets were found to be bioequivalent to the solution with regard to all pharmacokinetic parameters. The 250-mg tablet was not bioequivalent to either of the other formulations; the relative bioavailability values were 78.7 and 74.1%, respectively, for the 500-mg tablet and the solution. The clinical significance of this difference in bioavailability is yet to be determined.

This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit: