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Effect of quercetin on CYP3A activity in Chinese healthy participants.

Journal of clinical pharmacology (2011-06-18)
Kai-Ming Duan, Sai-Ying Wang, Wen Ouyang, Yan-Mei Mao, Li-Jun Yang
ABSTRACT

The aims of this study were to investigate the effect of quercetin on CYP3A activity in vivo. An open, randomized, 2-period crossover experiment was performed in 18 healthy male volunteers. Genotyped data were available from a total of 165 participants. The allelic frequency was 52.5%. Every volunteer ingested orally 500 mg quercetin or placebo once a day for 13 consecutive days. On day 14, a single 7.5-mg midazolam tablet was administrated orally. The plasma concentrations of midazolam and 1-OH-midazolam were determined over 24 hours. The results showed that coadministration of quercetin in CYP3A5*1/*1 and CYP3A5*1/*3 individuals significantly decreased the area under the curve (AUC(0-12 h)) of midazolam (160.88 ± 45.58 ng·h/mL vs 188.07 ± 65.75 ng·h/mL, P < .05), significantly decreased the AUC(0-∞) of midazolam (165.46 ± 47.15 ng·h/mL vs 211.84 ± 75.80 ng·h/mL, P < .01), shortened t(1/2) (2.06 ± 0.51 h vs 2.75 ± 0.89 h, P < .01), and decreased t(max) significantly (0.48 ± 0.36 h vs 1.06 ± 0.69 h, P < .01), respectively. In conclusion, quercetin significantly induced CYP3A activity to substrate midazolam, and the induction was partly related to the CYP3A5 genotype, being more prominent in CYP3A5*1/*1 and CYP3A5*1/*3 individuals.