2 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions
The purpose of this study is to determine if sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS), a non-drug ingredient commonly added in drug products, affect absorption of drugs that are given together with the ingredient. Investigators want to find out if drug absorption is different in people taking the drug alone compared to people taking the drug with low and high amounts of sodium lauryl sulfate at the same time.
The study employs two-sub-studies that share a common placebo arm. The objective of one sub-study is to assess the impact of metformin on pravastatin and chenodeoxycholic acid pharmacokinetics. We hypothesize that metformin represses the bile salt export pump (BSEP) in the liver, which excretes pravastatin and chenodeoxycholic acid from the liver into the bile. The objective of the other sub-study is to assess the impact of polysorbate 80 on valacyclovir, chenodeoxycholic acid, and enalaprilat pharmacokinetics. We hypothesize that polysorbate 80 inhibits uptake transporters in the intestine, which absorb valacyclovir and chenodeoxycholic acid in the gut via the peptide transporter 1 (PepT1) and apical sodium-bile acid transporter (ASBT), respectively. Enalaprilat is passively absorbed but with low permeability, and thus serves as a passive absorption reference.