Gastroenterology
Volume 101, Issue 4 , Pages 943-947, October 1991

Omeprazole treatment does not affect the metabolism of caffeine

Research Laboratories, AB Hassle, Molndal, Sweden

Abstract 

This study was performed to investigate the possible influence of repeated omeprazole dosing on the metabolism of caffeine, which has been shown to reflect the activity of one specific enzyme within the hepatic cytochrome P450 family, P450IA2. Ten healthy, nonsmoking young men participated in this placebo-controlled double-blind trial. Each subject was given omeprazole, 20 mg, every morning for 1 week and placebo every morning for 1 week in random order and separated by a 2-3 week washout period. On the sixth and seventh days of each period urine was collected twice daily, and urinary metabolites of caffeine were determined by high-performance liquid chromatography. The urinary metabolite ratio of three paraxanthine 7-demethylation products relative to a paraxanthine-hydroxylation product corresponds to caffeine clearance and, therefore, to P450IA2 activity. This calculated ratio was 4.8 (95% confidence interval, 3.9-5.6) in the placebo and 4.6 (95% confidence interval, 3.6-5.5) in the omeprazole period. These results show that the metabolism of caffeine was unaltered following omeprazole treatment, indicating that omeprazole treatment has no influence on cytochrome P450IA2 activity in the clinical situation. (Gastroenterology 1991 Oct;101(4):943-7)

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PII: 0016-5085(91)90719-2

Gastroenterology
Volume 101, Issue 4 , Pages 943-947, October 1991