Does concurrent fluconazole administration cause accumulation of unmetabolized terfenadine and alter cardiac repolarization in subjects taking terfenadine?
Concurrent administration of fluconazole and terfenadine alters terfenadine pharmacokinetics but does not lead to accumulation of the parent drug or clinically significant changes in cardiac repolarization.
Terfenadine is rapidly and nearly completely biotransformed during a first pass to an active acid metabolite. Accumulation of unmetabolized terfenadine has been associated with altered cardiac repolarization. Drug-drug interactions resulting in the accumulation of terfenadine have been reported for ketoconazole and erythromycin. Six subjects were given the recommended dose of terfenadine (60 mg every 12 hours) for 7 days before initiation of oral fluconazole (200 mg once daily). The mean metabolite area under the concentration-time curve increased by 34% and the time to maximum concentration of the metabolite was delayed from 2.3 to 4 hours by concurrent fluconazole. Unmetabolized terfenadine was not present in any subject, and cardiac repolarization was not significantly changed from baseline during any phase of the study. We conclude that a pharmacokinetic interaction between terfenadine and fluconazole exists; however, the absence of accumulation of parent terfenadine in plasma suggests that a clinically significant interaction is unlikely.
Honig et al. (Tue,) studied this question.