This article is available to subscribers. Subscribe now. Already have an account? Sign in

Original ArticleFree PreviewArchive

Theophylline Disposition in Patients with Hepatic Cirrhosis

List of authors.
  • Kenneth M. Piafsky, M.D.,
  • Daniel S. Sitar, Ph.D.,
  • Robert E. Rangno, M.D.,
  • and Richard I. Ogilvie, M.D.

Abstract

To determine the role of liver dysfunction in theophylline toxicity, we administered single intravenous doses of the drug to nine patients with cirrhosis and observed its disposition over a period of 24 to 48 hours. As compared to 19 normal subjects, these patients had a prolonged plasma half-life (mean, 25.6 vs. 6.7 hours) and a decreased plasma clearance (mean, 0.042 vs. 0.062 liter [kg-1] hr-1). Volumes of distribution of theophylline in the cirrhotic patients (central-compartment volume of 0.330, and steady-state volume of distribution of 0.785 liter per kilogram) did not substantially differ from normal (0.246 and 0.508 respectively). Plasma theophylline binding in three patients with cirrhosis averaged 36.8 per cent as compared to 52.6 per cent in four normal subjects. There was no correlation between any laboratory test of liver function and the plasma theophylline half-life, except for serum albumin (r = -0.92, P<0.001). The variable capacity to eliminate theophylline precludes the use of usual maintenance dose schedules for bronchodilation in cirrhosis. (N Engl J Med 296:1495–1497, 1977)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported by a grant (MA 4847) from the Medical Research Council of Canada and by a grant from the Canadian Foundation for the Advancement of Clinical Pharmacology (Dr. Sitar is a Monat Scholar of McGill University).

We are indebted to Mme. G. Veronneau and Mr. D. Shaw for technical assistance and to Dr. W. Parsons for the plasma protein binding studies.

Author Affiliations

From the Clinical Pharmacology Division, Montreal General Hospital, and the departments of Medicine, Pharmacology and Therapeutics, McGill University (address reprint requests to Dr. Ogilvie at Montreal General Hospital, 1650 Cedar Ave., Montreal, PQ, Canada H3G 1A4).

Print Subscriber? Activate your online access.