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Vol. 281, Issue 3, 1013-1029, 1997

Differential Reinforcement of Low Rate Performance, Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacokinetic-Pharmacodynamic Modeling: Independent Interaction of Alprazolam and Caffeine1

Chyan E. Lau, Yunxia Wang and John L. Falk

Department of Psychology, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey


    Abstract
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

To investigate the interaction between alprazolam and caffeine, performance on a differential reinforcement of low-rate behavior schedule and the respective pharmacokinetics (PK) were explored in concurrent studies. Alprazolam PK was not altered by caffeine, but alprazolam retarded caffeine absorption indirectly, as inferred by the lack of i.v. drug administration PK interaction, thereby decreasing serum methylxanthine concentrations. Inasmuch as alprazolam was more potent and short-lived than caffeine in decreasing the reinforcement rate (consonant with their respective t1/2 values, 0.44 and 3.1 hr), the alprazolam/caffeine potency ratio decreased across the session time, which determined the expression of the combined effects. Thus, the decreased methylxanthine level yielded slightly less disruption in performance for the observed combined effect, compared to the expected calculated effect, only near the end of a session. The interaction was PK linked and mainly not distinguishable from independence as indicated by the Pöch dose-response curve method and the integration of PK and pharmacodynamics. The sigmoid maximal effect-link pharmacodynamic model indicated that caffeine did not alter the concentration at half of the maximal effect value of alprazolam and suggested that the interaction is not competitive, but independent. Although the nature of the benzodiazepine-methylxanthine interaction has been controversial in other behavioral studies, as is the role of PK in determining behavior, this and our previous study make it evident that the interaction is independent not only across doses and routes of administration, but also with respect to two indices of differential reinforcement of low rate performance.


    Introduction
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

BZs are safe and widely prescribed for the chronic treatment of epilepsy, movement and panic disorders. They are given for the acute and subchronic treatment of insomnia, agitated psychosis and in surgery as effective preanesthetic and anesthetic agents (Martin and Haefely, 1995). However, interactions can occur with combinations of BZs and central nervous system stimulants (e.g., caffeine, cocaine), where one agent is prescribed and the other is ingested by choice (Boulenger et al., 1984; Charney et al., 1985). BZs exert their effects through the GABA-BZ receptor complex (Haefely et al., 1985). It is generally recognized that the antagonism of adenosine receptors at least partly underlies the pharmacological effects of low doses of MXs, whereas phosphodiesterase inhibition and calcium mobilization become more significant at higher doses (Choi et al., 1988; Daly, 1993; Snyder et al., 1981). Several studies have indicated that caffeine competes for binding at BZ sites, and conversely, that BZ may interact with adenosine receptors, although with low affinity in both cases, raising the question of the physiological relevance for these kinds of interactions (Bruns et al., 1983; Marangos et al., 1979; Weir and Hruska, 1983). Thus, the interactions between caffeine and the GABA-BZ system remain poorly defined.

Additive (Beer et al., 1972; Coffin and Spealman, 1985; Valentine and Spealman, 1983), antagonistic (Kaplan et al., 1990; Polc et al., 1981; Rush et al., 1994; Tang et al., 1989), functional antagonistic (Baldwin and File, 1989; Roache and Griffiths, 1987) and synergistic (Falk and Lau, 1991; Katims et al., 1983; Lau and Falk, 1991) interactions have been reported after concurrent BZ and MX administration using various kinds of behavioral paradigms in animals and humans. One of the major reasons for these differences arose from describing the combined effects qualitatively rather than from using quantitative methods specifically developed for that purpose.

Inasmuch as the pharmacological response often can be predicted from the respective PK, it is rational to investigate the role of PK on drug action and interaction before receptor mechanisms. However, the predictability of PK during drug interaction is not as simple and direct as it is when a drug is given alone. One needs not only to analyze the resultant PK changes of the parent drugs and their active metabolites after concurrent drug administration but also consider the potency relation of the two agents before inferring the role of PK in drug interaction. Failure to explore the potency relation may account, in part, for the conflicting findings relating PK to PD in BZ-MX combined effects (Ghoneim et al., 1986; Henauer et al., 1983; Kaplan et al., 1990; Tuncok et al., 1994).

Differential reinforcement of low rate schedules (e.g., DRL 45-s) produce low rates of responding as only those responses that occur after a minimum time interval (>= 45 sec) after a previous response are reinforced. Responses that occur before this time has elapsed are not reinforced, and they reset the timing of the interval. DRL behavior reaches baseline performance after sufficient training, and the effects of drug treatments can be compared to the performance baseline. The DRL schedule contingency not only involves time discrimination but also requires an appropriate inhibition of responding for reinforcement to occur, and involves other memory, sensory and motor capacities (Kramer and Riling, 1970). It has been suggested that the effect of many kinds of drug is to reduce the inhibition of behavior associated with signals of punishment or nonreward in DRL behavior (Gray, 1981). DRL performance satisfies many of the criteria proposed as ideal for PD measurement (Dingemanse et al., 1988; Laurijssens and Greenblatt, 1996). The fulfilling of a required, objectively defined, behavioral contingency by the subject, rather than using a passive measure of an unconditioned drug effect (e.g., EEG recording), affords the DRL method a distinct advantage. The performance measure is a continuous process rather than one limited to temporally discrete trials. Furthermore, it is sensitive to drug effects, and the effects are reproducible, an important feature for defining and evaluating drug interaction (Lau et al., 1996). Finally, after drug administration, reinforced and nonreinforced responses, which generally exhibit decreases and increases, respectively, can be used to evaluate the combined drug effects.

Recently, we used the DRC method proposed by Pöch and his colleagues (Pöch, 1993, 1992; Pöch and Pancheva, 1995; Pöch et al., 1990) to quantitatively analyze the combined effects of alprazolam and caffeine by using 3-hr sessions of DRL 45-sec performance (Lau and Wang, 1996). This method permits the evaluation of the combined effects not only from a phenomenologic (e.g., larger or smaller effect) but also from a mechanistic (additivity or independence) point of view. The assumptions used in the DRC method also can be applied to behavior-time profiles to extend the results obtained from DRC analyses. Values derived from the usual dose-response analyses (e.g., potency ratio of these agents) can aid in predicting the outcome of the combined effect, whereas the response-time curve describes the ongoing interaction profile.

An independent or additive interaction, which was neither synergistic nor antagonistic, characterized the combined effects of alprazolam and caffeine by the i.p. route using reinforcement rate as the PD measure (Lau and Wang, 1996). In that study, PK interaction was also characterized by using tail-tip blood samples between 15 and 180 min. It was concluded that the PK of alprazolam, caffeine and their combination were predictive of the resultant behavior-time profiles. The differences in potency and PK between the two drugs accounted for the expressions of the combined effects. The PK of alprazolam was not altered by the presence of caffeine, but the PK of caffeine was affected by alprazolam. Inasmuch as the PK drug interaction was not evaluated by the i.v. route in that study, the effects of alprazolam on caffeine PK were difficult to interpret.

Different types of interaction for BZ-MX sometimes were obtained from the same laboratory with the use of different behavioral measures or paradigms (De Angelis et al., 1982; Ghoneim et al., 1986; Loke et al., 1985). Our study is an expansion of the previous work on both behavior and PK, which aims to validate the interaction of alprazolam and caffeine by using: 1) different routes of administration; 2) not one but two different kinds of response measures, reinforced and nonreinforced, to investigate whether they were in conformity with each other; 3) blood samples from jugular vein between 2 and 180 min after drug administration to characterize the respective PK; 4) the i.v. route to calculate the PK parameters (e.g., volume of distribution, clearance, and bioavailability) and to define the pure PK drug interaction without having to consider drug absorption and 5) integration of PK and PD to delineate the nature of BZ-MX interaction and the predictive ability of the model.

Both alprazolam and caffeine are metabolized by the P-450 cytochrome enzyme system (Aldridge et al., 1977; von Moltke et al., 1993). Factors (e.g., food restriction) affecting this enzyme system will affect the PK of these agents and will lead to PD changes (Lau et al., 1995; Lau et al., 1996; Sachan, 1982). Both alprazolam and caffeine are absorbed rapidly in rats with an elimination half-life of 0.5 to 0.9 and 3 hr, respectively (Lau and Wang, 1996; Lau et al., 1995; Owens et al., 1991). In humans, food deprivation or restriction can occur for cosmetic, health or economic reasons. In DRL behavior, a food-deprivation regimen is applied to animals to implement a food-reinforced behavioral DRL performance baseline. Thus, it is important to investigate the PK of alprazolam, caffeine and their combinations in food-limited rats, especially because these drugs are metabolized by the P-450 cytochrome enzyme system. Furthermore, based on their half-lives, a 3-hr session was used, a period necessary to investigate the interaction at the onset, peak and disappearance of serum alprazolam concentration, while that of caffeine remained constant, so that we could achieve a better understanding of the mechanisms of drug action and interaction.

Different routes of administration provided an opportunity to examine the interaction of drug concentration-time profiles that might differ from that of the i.p. route, as PK parameters are generally route dependent (e.g., absorption rate constant, metabolite formation and bioavailability). In our study, alprazolam and caffeine were given s.c. and p.o., respectively. There are considerations for choosing these routes of administration. As in the case of midazolam (Lau et al., 1996), we found the s.c. route to be the route of choice owing to its high absolute bioavailability, as well as its dependability in producing consistent within-subject serum concentration-time profiles for repeated doses, whereas for caffeine, the oral route is used by humans for its consumption with high bioavailability (Axelrod and Reichental, 1953).

Although DRL performance has been used extensively in behavioral pharmacology to study the effects of various drugs from different classes, it has not been used for PK-PD studies, except in our laboratory. We have found not only that the DRL 45-sec reinforcement rate-time profiles correlated well with serum alprazolam, caffeine and midazolam concentration-time profiles but also that bioavailability values derived from those profiles mirrored those estimated from PK for midazolam following i.v., s.c., i.p. and p.o. routes of administration (Lau and Wang, 1996; Lau et al., 1996). Integrating PK and PD permits the investigation and possible prediction of drug concentration-effect relations, which are sensitive to variables such as drug interaction, aging and the disease state. Examination of the alprazolam concentration-effect relation in the presence and absence of caffeine can shed light on the nature of the interaction. The competitive interaction between flumazenil and midazolam was demonstrated in humans (Breimer et al. 1991) and in rats (Mandema et al. 1991) with PK-PD modeling by parallel shifts in the concentration-electroencephalography effect relation of midazolam with increasing flumazenil concentration.

    Materials and Methods
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

DRL Performance

Animals. Seven male, albino, Sprague-Dawley rats from HSD (Indianapolis, IN) were used. They were housed individually in a temperature-regulated room with a daily cycle of illumination from 7:00 A.M. to 7:00 P.M. They were reduced to 80% of their initial, adult free-feeding body weights (mean = 383 g; range: 380-388 g) over a 2-wk period by limiting daily food rations: 5 g for the first day, 10 g for the next 5 days and a food supplement (range 14-16 g) to maintain their 80% body weights. Water was continuously available in the living cages. Experiments were executed in accordance with the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (National Institute of Health Publ. no. 85-23, revised 1985).

Drugs. Alprazolam was obtained from Upjohn Laboratories (Kalamazoo, MI). Alprazolam (5 mg) was dissolved in 50 µl of 1.2 N HCl and further diluted to working concentration with 0.9% NaCl solution. Caffeine was purchased from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO) and was dissolved in sodium benzoate (37.5 mg/ml) solution. Alprazolam and caffeine were administered s.c. and p.o. by gavage, respectively, in an injection volume of 1 ml/kg body weight.

Apparatus. Four operant Plexiglas chambers were used and have been described previously (Lau and Wang, 1996). Each chamber, equipped with a response lever and a stainless steel food-pellet receptacle into which 45-mg dustless pellets (BioServ, Frenchtown, NJ) could be delivered, was enclosed in a sound-attenuating shell and was controlled by an IBM-type 486 X computer. Session contingencies were programmed and data recorded using QuickBasic.

Procedure. Animals were magazine trained on a noncontingent random-time schedule initially for 15 min and responses on the lever were shaped by successive approximation and reinforced when IRTs were greater than 3 sec. The temporal requirement was slowly increased to an IRT of 45 sec over 10 to 20 sessions. A 3-hr operant session was conducted daily. After performance had stabilized, a drug-administration series began. The series consisted of: 1) Alprazolam dose-response determination (vehicle, 0.125, 0.4, 1.25, 4 and 7 mg/kg); 2) caffeine dose-response determination (vehicle, 5, 10, 20, 40, 80 and 120 mg/kg); 3) alprazolam-caffeine combinations: (a) alprazolam + 30 mg/kg caffeine, i.e., vehicle + vehicle; vehicle + 30 mg/kg caffeine; 0.125 to 7 mg/kg alprazolam + 30 mg/kg caffeine (b) alprazolam + 20 mg/kg caffeine, i.e., vehicle + 20 mg/kg caffeine; 0.125 to 7 mg/kg alprazolam + 20 mg/kg caffeine. At the end of each combination series, the caffeine dose for that series (e.g., vehicle + 20 mg/kg caffeine) was redetermined. Injections were given immediately before the start of a session and separated by 3 to 5 days. Injections within each series were given in a quasirandom order. Each drug series was separated by 10 noninjection sessions.

Data analyses. The IRT distributions after the administration of vehicle, alprazolam, caffeine and alprazolam-caffeine combinations were analyzed for 3-hr sessions, omitting the first 2 min, which was treated as the settling time. Baseline IRT distributions for each session that immediately preceded an injection also were analyzed. Behavioral parameters were derived from the IRT distributions: shorter (nonreinforced)-response rate, reinforcement rate, total response rate and efficiency. Total number of responses consisted of responses with IRT >=  45 and < 45 sec, which are the reinforced and nonreinforced responses, respectively. These responses were calculated as rates (responses per min). Efficiency was calculated as the ratio of reinforcement rate to the total response rate. We have found that both the reinforcement rate in the 45-to-55- and >= 45-sec bins decreased equivalently as a function of dosage for alprazolam and caffeine by the i.p. route. The 45- to 55-sec bin function required a lower dose to reach Emax for both drugs, and consequently resulted in smaller ED50 values (Lau and Wang, 1996). The 45- to 55-sec bin function has been used successfully to characterize the alprazolam-caffeine interaction, and justification will be given in "Results" referring to figures 4A-C. Specific attention was given to the 45- to 55-sec bin data in this study, facilitating the comparison of our results with those from the previous study.


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Fig. 4.   Mean reinforcement rate-, efficiency-, total-, and shorter-response-rate-time profiles: (A) baseline; (B) 1.25 mg/kg alprazolam and (C) 20 mg/kg caffeine. Reinforcement rate and efficiency measures on left ordinate scales. Total respond and shorter-response rate measures on right ordinate scales.

Peak deviation analysis developed by Richards et al. (1993) was used for characterizing effects of alprazolam and caffeine with the parameters, peak area and peak location that determine the size and the center of the IRT distribution peak, respectively. Reduction in peak area indicates that the IRTs are more disrupted, suggesting a decrease in temporal stimulus control.

DRCs for caffeine, alprazolam and alprazolam-caffeine combinations were constructed using a four-parameter, logistic function of the following equation by the ALLFIT curve-fitting program written for the IBM PC (DeLean et al., 1978, 1992):
y<IT>=</IT>[(a<IT>−</IT>d)<IT>/</IT>(<IT>1+</IT>(x<IT>/</IT>c)<SUP>b</SUP>)]<IT>+</IT>d
where, y is the percent of baseline performance in 45- to 55-sec bin and x is the drug dose administered. The four fitted parameters were: a, the Emin, i.e., the % baseline performance when x = 0; d, the Emax,i.e., the % baseline performance for "infinite" dose; b, the slope factor that determines the steepness of the curve; c, the ED50, i.e., the dose resulting in a response halfway between a and d.

Characterization of alprazolam-caffeine interaction by DRC method proposed by Pöch. Alprazolam-caffeine interactions were evaluated by comparing the dose-response curves for alprazolam in the presence and absence of two caffeine doses following the method of combined effects proposed by Pöch and his colleagues (Pöch, 1993; Pöch et al., 1990) and have been described previously (Lau and Wang, 1996). From the results of seven-animal medians, rather than means, values of both observed and expected DRCs of the DRL behavior were used for statistical evaluation of observed versus expected frequencies by the chi 2 goodness-of-fit test.

There are two models in the Pöch DRC method, additivity and independence. The additivity model of dose-additive combinations is based on the assumption that alprazolam and caffeine act alike, i.e., that alprazolam acts like caffeine or vice versa. Then, the combination of alprazolam plus caffeine should behave as if it were a combination of alprazolam and alprazolam. The Pöch DRC method assumes that alprazolam and caffeine act at the same receptor. Briefly, theoretical additive interactions for the DRC method can be derived from the dose-response relation of alprazolam alone: the same effect obtained with alprazolam alone can be expected at doses of alprazolam minus the x dose of alprazolam with which a fixed dose of caffeine is equieffective. For example, observing that 10 mg/kg caffeine is equieffective with a dose of x mg/kg alprazolam, then the expected effect of y mg/kg alprazolam in an additive curve would be equivalent to a dose of (y-x) mg/kg alprazolam. Thus, the expected additive curve can be constructed for all the dose levels of alprazolam in the presence of a fixed dose of caffeine. By the same principle, the calculated additive curve for the combined effects in a behaviortime profile also can be calculated from the DRCs at different time periods.

The second model of the Pöch DRC method, independent action, implies that the response to alprazolam is unaffected by the presence of caffeine, i.e., the net effect of alprazolam is not altered by caffeine and vice versa. It assumes that these two agents act at different receptors. The combined effects of theoretical independent actions are not simply the sum of the individual effects, and can be calculated for both the DRC and time course curves by setting DRL baseline performance level at 1:
PB<SUB>alp+caff</SUB><IT>=</IT>PB<SUB>alp</SUB><IT>×</IT>PB<SUB>caff</SUB>
where, PBalp+caff, PBalp, PBcaff are the PB values for alprazolam-caffeine combination, alprazolam, and caffeine, respectively, assuming drugs decrease the reinforcement rate. For example, if PBalp = 0.25, PBcaff = 0.6, then PBalp+caff = 0.25 × 0.6 = 0.15. Thus, the fractions by which alprazolam and caffeine decrease the reinforcement rate are not altered in the combined effect if alprazolam and caffeine act independently. In this example, alprazolam reduces the reinforcement rate to 1/4 from 0.6 to 0.15 in the presence of caffeine and from 1.0 to 0.25 in the absence of caffeine.

Median rather than mean values were used to construct dose-response curves of these agents and their combinations, and chi 2 analyses were used to compare the observed combined effects to theoretical values of independent and additive interactions. If the combined effects are greater or smaller than the theoretical curves, then synergism or antagonism occurred, respectively. In addition, mean rather than median behavior-time profiles were constructed with respect to the mean expected independent curves. Statistical analyses for the comparison of behavior-time profiles were performed by repeated measures, two-way analyses of variance using SigmaStat, followed by Newman-Keuls tests (Jandel, San Rafael, CA).

Pharmacokinetics of Alprazolam, Caffeine and their Combinations

Animals. Eight male, albino rats of the same strain were used under the conditions and food-limitation regimen used above. The mean initial, adult free-feeding body weight was 388 g (range 380-391 g).

Drugs and reagents. Alprazolam, alpha -hydroxyalprazolam and 4-hydroxyalprazolam were obtained from Upjohn Laboratories, Kalamazoo, MI. Caffeine, theobromine, paraxanthine, theophylline and beta -hydroxyethyltheophylline were purchased from Sigma Chemical Company Co., St. Louis, MO. Reagents were obtained from standard commercial sources.

HPLC determination of alprazolam, caffeine and their metabolites and serum sampling. HPLC. Serum microsample HPLC methods for determination of alprazolam, caffeine and their metabolites have been described previously (Jin and Lau, 1994; Lau and Falk, 1991). Separation for both drugs was performed on Beckman Ultrasphere C18 columns (5-µm particle size, 150 × 2 mm I.D.). Programmable absorbance UV detectors 785A (Applied Biosystems Instruments, Foster City, CA) were operated at 230 and 270 nm for alprazolam and caffeine methods, respectively. The capacity factors for demoxepam used as internal standard, 4-hydroxyalprazolam, alpha -hydroxyalprazolam and alprazolam were 2.08, 2.73, 3.37 and 4.43, respectively, whereas for theobromine, paraxanthine, theophylline, beta -hydroxyethyltheophylline (internal standard) and caffeine were 1.31, 2.52, 2.97, 3.73 and 6.45, respectively. There was no mutual interference between these two agents or among their metabolites with respect to the HPLC methods.

Catheterization. Right jugular vein cannulation was perfomed under sterile conditions and has been described earlier (Lau et al., 1996). The proximal end of the silastic catheter was inserted into jugular vein and the distal end of the catheter was threaded s.c. and exited through a small incision in the back of the animal. The catheter was flushed with 0.9% saline with 50 U of heparin and sealed with fishing line when not in use.

Drug administration and blood sampling. Animals were allowed to recover for at least 2 days from the jugular vein catheterization before the drug administration series. Animals in group 1 (N = 4) initially received an i.v. dose of alprazolam (1.25 mg/kg) via the jugular vein catheter as their first drug treatment, followed on other days by s.c. alprazolam doses into the skin on the back of the neck in the presence and absence of 20 mg/kg p.o. caffeine by gavage (1.25 mg/kg alprazolam; 20 mg/kg caffeine; 1.25 mg/kg alprazolam + 20 mg/kg caffeine; 4 mg/kg alprazolam; 4 mg/kg alprazolam + 20 mg/kg caffeine; 7 mg/kg alprazolam; 7 mg/kg alprazolam + 20 mg/kg caffeine). Animals then received p.o. doses of caffeine, 80, 10, 40 and 120 mg/kg. Animals in group 2 (N = 4) were used to study PK interaction between alprazolam and caffeine by the i.v. route. Three i.v. bolus doses were administered in random order on different days: 1.25 mg/kg alprazolam, 10 mg/kg caffeine and their combination. Drug doses were separated by 3 to 5 days for both groups of animals. Drugs were given in a volume of 1 ml/kg body weight. Although two caffeine doses (20 and 30 mg/kg) were used for the evaluation of the PD interaction, only 20 mg/kg caffeine was used for the PK interaction because of the limitation of catheter life. Alprazolam and caffeine doses used for the i.v. route were chosen mainly to approximate the respective, comparable serum concentration-time profiles of the extravascular routes of administration. This made possible comparisons between pairs of profiles despite the initial profile differences during the absorption phase, owing to the diverse nature of the i.v. and extravascular routes of administration. The use of 1.25 i.v. mg/kg alprazolam dose was arbitrary as the bioavailability of s.c. alprazolam is complete (table 1). However, the use of 10 mg/kg i.v. caffeine dose was the one most appropriate producing a serum caffeine concentration-time profile corresponding to that of 20 mg/kg p.o. caffeine for the time when DRL performance was evaluated.


                              
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TABLE 1
Mean PK parameters (±S.D.) for alprazolam after i.v. 1.25 mg/kg administration and three s.c. doses of alprazolam in the presence and absence of p.o. 20 mg/kg caffeine in rats (N = 4)

Blood samples (100 µl) from the jugular catheter were obtained after drug administration at 2, 5, 15, 30, 45, 60, 90, 120, 180, 240 and 360 min postinjection. To maintain the feeding regimen and also avoid the effect of food on drug PK, especially for the oral route, drug doses were given 6 hr before the feeding time. Thus, the daily food supplements were given immediately after the last blood samples.

Data analyses. PK analysis was performed using SAAM II (SAAM Institute, Seattle, WA, 1994). The data were described by an open two-compartment model for alprazolam and fit to the following equation:
C<SUB>p</SUB><IT>=</IT>Ae<SUP>−<IT>&agr;</IT>t</SUP><IT>+</IT>Be<SUP>−<IT>&bgr;</IT>t</SUP>
where, Cp is the total serum drug concentration at time t, the terms A and B are the extrapolated zero intercepts, and alpha and beta  represent the apparent first-order distribution and elimination rate constants, respectively. The t1/2 for the distribution or elimination phase, and Vc, were calculated by the following equations: t1/2 = 0.693/alpha or beta  and Vc = dose/(A + B). For the s.c. route of alprazolam administration, an absorption rate constant, ka, was also calculated. The PK parameters, Cl and Vss were calculated using noncompartmental methodology. The area under the serum drug concentration-time curve (AUC0-infinity ) and area under the first moment of the serum drug concentration-time curve (AUMC0-infinity ) were calculated by the following equations: AUC0-infinity  = A/alpha + B/beta ; AUMC0-infinity  = A/alpha ^2 + B/beta ^2. Total Cl was then defined as dose/AUC0-infinity and Vss as dose × AUMC0-infinity /AUC20-infinity . The values reported as the Cmax and Tmax are the actual observed values. The F for s.c. alprazolam (1.25 mg/kg) can be calculated by the following formula:
F<IT>=</IT>[D<SUB>i.v.</SUB>(AUC<SUB><IT>0-∞</IT></SUB>)<SUB>s.c.</SUB>]<IT>/</IT>[(AUC<SUB><IT>0-∞</IT></SUB>)<SUB>i.v.</SUB>D<SUB>s.c.</SUB>]
where, for the s.c. and i.v. routes, Ds.c. and Di.v. are the respective doses; (AUC0-infinity )s.c. and (AUC0-infinity )i.v. are the respective AUCs.

Inasmuch as the half-life of caffeine is 3 hr (Lau et al., 1995) PK analysis was not conducted. Statistical analyses for the comparison of PK parameters and serum concentration-time profiles were performed by repeated measures, one-way and two-way analyses of variance, respectively, followed by Newman-Keuls tests, where appropriate.

PK-PD Modeling: PK and DRL Performance

Data Analysis. Integration of PK and PD was based on the relation between mean serum alprazolam concentration-time profiles for the three s.c. doses (1.25-7 mg/kg) in the presence and absence of p.o. 20 mg/kg caffeine of group 1 in PK studies (N = 4) and the respective mean behavior-time profiles in PD studies (N = 7).

PK-PD modeling was also performed by using SAAM II. The model consists of two parts (fig. 1). The first was a classical PK model with two or three compartments (cpts) with elimination occurring from the central compartment to describe the PK of alprazolam by the i.v. (cpts 1 and 2) or s.c. (cpts 1, 2 and 3) routes of administration, respectively. The k(1, 2) and k(2, 1) were the intercompartmental rate constants, and k(0, 1) was the elimination rate constant from the central cpt.


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Fig. 1.   Diagrammatic representation of the integrated PK-PD model used to describe the reinforcement rate in the 45- to 55-sec bin (effect-link model) after s.c. administration of a single dose of alprazolam. The k(1, 2) and k(2, 1) are the inter-cpt rate constants, and k(0, 1) is the elimination rate constant.

Linked to the PK model is a PD model that relates the observed concentration of alprazolam in the central PK cpt to the observed effect. The effect-link model proposed by (Sheiner et al., 1979) was used in this study. This model has a hypothetical effect compartment connected to a PK model. Alprazolam was assumed to enter and leave the effect compartment according to first-order kinetics with rate constants, kle and keo, respectively. The central cpt of the PK model is linked to the effect compartment by kle. The general assumption is that mass loss via kle is "negligible" (Sheiner et al., 1979); however, to ensure no loss of mass to the effect site, a "dummy" compartment was linked to the central compartment via the rate constant -kle. The addition of this compartment did not increase the complexity of the model, as the rate constant was fixed. Therefore, the effect cpt did not alter the serum concentration-time profile, making an additional exponential term unnecessary in the PK model. Under these assumptions the value of kle is unimportant, and keo (i.e., the elimination rate constant of alprazolam from the effect compartment) characterizes the equilibrium time between serum concentrations and pharmacological effect. The time required to reach 50% of the steady-state effect is the half-time of effect equilibrium and is calculated as 0.693/keo. The decrement in the mean % baseline reinforcement rate produced by alprazolam in the 45- to 55-sec bin was related to the serum alprazolam concentration using a modified sigmoid Emax model (Wald et al., 1991).
Effect<IT>=</IT>E<SUB><IT>0</IT></SUB><FENCE><IT>1−</IT><FR><NU>C<SUP>N</SUP></NU><DE>IC<SUP>N</SUP><SUB><IT>50</IT></SUB><IT>+</IT>C<SUP>N</SUP></DE></FR></FENCE>
where E0 is the effect when alprazolam concentration is zero in the presence and absence of caffeine, and IC50 is the concentration (C) that decreased E0 to 50%. N determines the sigmoid shape of the function and contributes to the steepness of the slope. This produces a PD model that describes effects as a function of time. In PK-PD modeling, the PK model is first defined by obtaining the PK parameters derived from the serum alprazolam concentration-time profiles, and then are used as constants in the PD model, with the DRL behavior-time profiles as input, to estimate the PD model parameters, E0 and IC50, as well as the value of keo. Assessment of the goodness of fit of each model to experimental data was based on correlation matrix, residual and weighted residual plots, visual plots, and error in parameter estimation (S.D.) that is derived from the covariance matrix provided by SAAM II.

    Results
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Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

DRL Performance

Figure 2A-B, as an example, show the effects of alprazolam and caffeine on IRT distributions for the first 30 min of the sessions. For baseline days and vehicle administration, the highest response rate occurred in the 40- to 50-sec band. Both alprazolam and caffeine decreased the reinforced, and increased the nonreinforced response rate in a dose-related fashion.


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Fig. 2.   Mean effects of (A) s.c. alprazolam (0-7 mg/kg); (B) p.o. caffeine (0-120 mg/kg) on IRT distributions for 2 to 30 min after drug administration. All the responses were nonreinforced (<45 sec) before the first arrow and reinforced (>= 45 sec) after the first arrow. Responses between the two arrows were the 45- to 55-sec bin responses.

Figure 3A-F show an overview of DRL performance for the 3-hr session after vehicle and drug administration. Decreases in reinforcement rate in the 45- to 55-sec bin, and in bins larger than 45 sec, were linear with respect to alprazolam dose, whereas these functions for caffeine reached a plateau at higher doses (fig. 3A). At higher doses, both alprazolam and caffeine increased shorter IRTs (<45 sec); however, the increases were more profound for caffeine than for alprazolam (fig. 3B). The opposing relation between the reinforced and nonreinforced response rate after drug administration resulted in a higher total response rate only at the 40-mg/kg caffeine dose (fig. 3C). Consequently, efficiency for both drugs was similar to the reinforcement-rate function across doses (fig. 3D). For both alprazolam and caffeine, dose-response relations for the peak area measure were similar to those in the 45- to 55-sec bin (fig. 3E), whereas the center of the IRT distribution peak shifted to the shorter IRTs as shown by the peak location measure (fig. 3F).


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Fig. 3.   Mean (S.E.) % baseline dose-response curves of alprazolam and caffeine for 3-hr sessions: (A) reinforcement rate in the >= 45- and 45- to 55-sec bins; (B) shorter-response rate; (C) total response rate; (D) efficiency; (E) peak area and (F) peak location. % B, percent baseline.

Figure 4A shows that the mean behavioral performance measures (reinforcement rate for both the responses >45 sec and in the 45- to 55-sec bin, shorter response rate, total response rate and efficiency) during baseline days were similar across the duration of the 3-hr sessions. The respective performance measures for 1.25 mg/kg alprazolam and 20 mg/kg caffeine (one dose from each drug as examples) are shown in Figures 4B and C, respectively. During baseline days, the ratio of reinforcement rate in the 45- to 55-sec bin to the total reinforcement rate was approximately 0.9 (e.g., 0.69/0.79 = 0.87 for time point at 60 min, fig. 4A), which implied that 90% of the reinforced responses occurred in the 45- to 55-sec bin. For the 1.25-mg/kg dose, the ratios were 0.25 and 0.9 at 15 and 180 min, respectively (fig. 4B). The smaller the ratio, the more IRTs occurred in the bins larger than 55 sec. Although both alprazolam and caffeine decreased reinforcement rate, it is apparent that alprazolam effects were short-lived, whereas they remained relatively constant for caffeine across the session. For example, at time point 150 min, the reinforcement rate in the 45- to 55-sec bin was approximately at the baseline level for alprazolam (0.64 min-1), whereas it remained low for caffeine (0.34 min-1). Reinforcement rate in the 45- to 55-sec bin was more sensitive to drug effects than the total reinforcement rate was, especially during the phase when performance was returning to baseline. It also required lower doses to reach Emax than the total reinforcement rate measure did. Therefore, the 45- to 55-sec bin was used to characterize the effects of drugs when given alone and in combination to minimize the possibility of behavioral toxicity that might occur if higher doses were necessary to perform the analysis. The highest efficiency occurred at the time when the shorter-response rate was the lowest.

Inasmuch as effects of alprazolam were short-lived, DRCs for alprazolam and caffeine in the 45- to 55-sec bin were constructed by ALLFIT using four time periods (fig. 5A-D). Performance attained a plateau for alprazolam for the first two time periods, but they differed in Emax values, 13.08 and 4.9% for 2 to 30 and 31 to 60 min, respectively. The Emax value in the second time period was used for the two later time periods because the dose-response relation for alprazolam is unlikely to change across time after it had reached Emax. DRCs of alprazolam shifted to the right across the four time periods, whereas those curves remained similar for caffeine (fig. 5A-D). Thus, ED50 values for alprazolam changed across the four time periods from 0.26, 0.5, 1.72 to 5.26 mg/kg (i.e., 0.84, 1.62, 5.57 to 17.04 µmol/kg, respectively), whereas for caffeine those values, 14.13, 18.04, 20.42 and 16.71 mg/kg (i.e., 72.8, 92.9, 105.2 and 86.1 µmol/kg, respectively) remained relatively similar throughout the session. As a result, the potency ratios of these two agents in terms of µmol/kg changed during a session from 86 to 5. The slope values for alprazolam and caffeine were similar, 1.82 and 1.86, respectively. For the first hour, the effect of alprazolam on DRL performance plateaued at 4 mg/kg, but approximately linear dose-response relations occurred for the second and third hours, with a disappearance of effect for the lower alprazolam doses.


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Fig. 5.   Alprazolam and caffeine DRCs constructed by using median % baseline reinforcement rate in the 45-55 s bin for four time periods: (A) 2 to 30 min; (B) 31 to 60 min; (C) 61 to 120 min; (D) 121 to 180 min.

As described in "Methods," for each drug combination series, s.c. saline + a fixed dose of p.o. caffeine (20 or 30 mg/kg) was given not only in the beginning, but also at the end of a series, and these points are also shown in figure 5A-D. There were only minor variations observed for the 30-mg/kg caffeine dose in the time periods 31 to 60 and 61 to 120 min, which implied that the effects of a fixed dose of caffeine did not vary across a combination series. Thus, mean value of the two treatments in the series of a given caffeine dose was used to characterize the combined effects below.

Using the 31- to 60-min time period as an example, the effects of alprazolam in the presence of two fixed doses of caffeine (20-30 mg/kg) in the reinforcement rate in the 45- to 55-sec bin were analyzed by the Pöch DRC method for the combined effects (Fig. 6B-C). Both the expected independent and additive curves for all the caffeine combinations (10, 20, 30, 40, 80 and 120 mg/kg) can be obtained simply and predicted from the DRCs of alprazolam and caffeine (fig. 5A-D) as described in "Methods," an advantage of the Pöch method, and the expected curves are shown in sequence as pairs in figure 6A. The combined effects of alprazolam in the presence of two doses of caffeine did not differ from either the theoretical expected independent or additive curves as reflected by the chi 2 statistics, although there were two observed median values deviant from the expected (e.g., 1.25 mg/kg alprazolam + 30 mg/kg caffeine). Thus, the combined effects were neither synergistic nor antagonistic.


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Fig. 6.   Alprazolam DRCs in the presence and absence of a fixed dose of caffeine (20 or 30 mg/kg) constructed by using median % baseline reinforcement rate in the 45- to 55-sec bin for time period 31 to 60 min. (A) Theoretical expected additive and independent curves shown as pairs for each caffeine dose (10-120 mg/kg); (B) alprazolam + 20 mg/kg caffeine and (C) alprazolam + 30 mg/kg caffeine. The observed values and the two expected curves are shown for each combination series with chi 2 statistics.

The mean performance of behavior-time profiles in the 45- to 55-sec bin for caffeine, alprazolam in the presence and absence of two fixed doses of caffeine (20-30 mg/kg) and the expected independent curves from 15 to 180 min, are shown in figs. 7 and 8. The effects of vehicle administration (saline, sodium benzoate and their combination) were close to baseline (100%) on the DRL behavior-time profiles except at the 15 min for the vehicle combinations. Each of these vehicle treatments is shown in separate quadrants for a clear view and to avoid repetition. Generally, the decrements in the 45- to 55-sec bin for the three highest alprazolam doses (1.25-7 mg/kg) in the presence of 20 mg/kg caffeine were similar to those occurring when alprazolam was given alone. Although, in the presence of 30 mg/kg caffeine the combined effects deviated from alprazolam effects after 60 min in a dose-related fashion and approached independence. However, for the lowest alprazolam dose (0.125 mg/kg), the combined effects were closer to those of caffeine or independent effects rather than to those of alprazolam. The mean expected additive curves are not shown for the combination series as those curves were not separable from the independent curves. The two drug combination series showed independent interaction for all the time points across the 3-hr session (figs. 7 and 8), except the time point at 180 min for 7 mg/kg alprazolam + 20 mg/kg caffeine; the decrement in reinforcement rate was less than the expected independent effect, although it did not differ from the effect of alprazolam given alone. These results demonstrate that comparing observed combined effects to calculated expected curves is crucial for characterizing drug interaction.


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Fig. 7.   Mean (S.E.) % baseline reinforcement rate- (45- to 55-sec) time profiles after 20 mg/kg caffeine alone, and alprazolam (0.125-7 mg/kg) in the presence and absence of 20 mg/kg caffeine. Expected independent curves (S.E.) are shown for each combination. Saline and sodium benzoic acid are the vehicles for alprazolam and caffeine, respectively. *P < .05 relative to the respective independent curve.


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Fig. 8.   Mean (S.E.) % baseline reinforcement rate- (45- to 55-sec) time profiles after 30 mg/kg caffeine alone, and alprazolam (0.125-7 mg/kg) in the presence and absence of 30 mg/kg caffeine. Saline, and sodium benzoic acid are the vehicles for alprazolam and caffeine, respectively. Expected independent curves (S.E.) are shown for each combination.

For the three higher doses of alprazolam (1.25-7 mg/kg) in the presence and absence of caffeine (20 mg/kg p.o.), the shorter-response rate decreased to baseline level after the initial stimulation, but again increased in a dose-related fashion in terms of its time to peak and the duration of the peak (fig. 9). For example, the peak times were at 60, 90, and 150 min for 1.25, 4 and 7 mg/kg, respectively, and the peak durations progressively increased. In each case the second peak lasted longer, but was less elevated, compared to the first peak. Caffeine at 20 mg/kg produced a milder stimulation (150% of baseline) across the session except a 350% increase was observed in shorter response rate at 5 min. Thus, the pattern of effects for the shorter-response rate differed for the two drugs. However, the presence of caffeine did not alter the dynamics of the above two-peak phenomenon (P > .05).


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Fig. 9.   Mean (S.E.) % baseline shorter-response rate- (<45-sec-time profiles after alprazolam (1.25-7 mg/kg) in the presence and absence of 20 mg/kg caffeine.

Pharmacokinetics of Alprazolam, Caffeine and their Combinations

Alprazolam PK by the s.c. route in the presence and absence of 20 mg/kg p.o. caffeine. After i.v. administration, alprazolam was eliminated according to a biphasic process. Alprazolam was rapidly distributed with a mean distribution t1/2alpha of 5.14 min, and was eliminated with a mean terminal elimination t1/2beta of 40.58 min (table 1). The Vc, Vss and clearance were 1.65 liter/kg, 3.85 liter/kg and 6.15 liter/hr/kg, respectively. Alprazolam metabolites, the two oxidative metabolites, 4-hydroxyalprazolam and alpha -hydroxyalprazolam, were not detectable.

Fig. 10A-B and table 1 show the concentration-time profiles and PK parameters of the three s.c. doses (1.25-7 mg/kg) of alprazolam in the presence and absence of 20 mg/kg p.o. caffeine, respectively. For the three alprazolam doses, caffeine did not alter the rate and extent of alprazolam absorption and elimination. The absorption of alprazolam was rapid, as is evident in the values of Tmax, 10 to 20 min and the large ka values. After reaching the peak concentrations, there were rapid decreases in alprazolam serum concentration, followed by a slower decay, for the three alprazolam doses (table 1). Alprazolam was short-lived with a t1/2 in the range of 29.1 to 56.89 min for the three doses in the presence and absence of caffeine. Furthermore, caffeine did not alter the alprazolam AUC(0-infinity ) values, and these were a linear function of dose. The mean F% for alprazolam was close to 100% (80.2-128.4%).


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Fig. 10.   Mean (S.E.) serum alprazolam concentration-time profiles and the fitted curves after PK modeling following administration: (A) alprazolam s.c. 1.25 to 7 mg/kg and (B) alprazolam s.c. 1.25 to 7 mg/kg + p.o 20 mg/kg caffeine.

The two metabolites, 4-hydroxyalprazolam and alpha -hydroxyalprazolam, were only detected in two animals after s.c. alprazolam administration. For one animal, caffeine did not alter the formation and elimination of the two metabolites (data not shown). For the other animal, serum concentrations of the two metabolites were markedly low at all the time points.

Oral caffeine PK in the presence and absence of three s.c. doses of alprazolam (1.25-7 mg/kg). The serum caffeine and its three DMX metabolites (theobromine, paraxanthine and theophylline) concentration-time profiles after five doses of p.o. caffeine (10-120 mg/kg) are shown in Fig. 11A-D. For the doses of 10, 40 and 120 mg/kg caffeine, not all the serum samples were obtained from jugular vein catheters. In two of the four animals, their jugular vein catheters became occluded and blood could not be withdrawn after nine blood-sampling series as described in "Materials and Methods" Thus, for these two animals, tail-tip blood samples were used for determining the serum concentrations of caffeine and the three DMXs. Blood samples of one animal in this group, who had completed the blood sampling series, was used to determine whether the values estimated from the tail-tip samples were in accordance with those values obtained from the jugular vein samples by simultaneously collecting both samples at 5, 15, 30 and 60 min after 40 mg/kg p.o. caffeine administration. Serum caffeine concentrations at 5, 15, 30 and 60 min for tail-tip and jugular vein samples, respectively, were 3.26 and 8.88 µg/ml; 13.21 and 15.91 µg/ml; 17.8 and 19.62 µg/ml; 20.85 and 21.73 µg/ml, respectively. Serum caffeine concentration was much lower in tail-tip than in the jugular vein sample at 5 min, but progressively indifferent for the two samples with time. Similar results were found for the serum DMX concentrations. Thus, for these three caffeine doses (10, 40 and 120 mg/kg), mean serum caffeine and DMX concentrations were only calculated between 15 to 180 min.


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Fig. 11.   Mean (S.E.) serum concentration-time profiles after p.o. caffeine (10-120 mg/kg) administration: (A) caffeine; (B) theobromine; (C) paraxanthine and (D) theophylline.

Caffeine attained its Cmax after about 2 hr, and serum caffeine concentrations remained close to Cmax values for the 6 hr measured after the five p.o. doses of caffeine (fig. 11A). Serum caffeine concentrations showed a dose-related increase except for the 40- and 80-mg/kg doses. Caffeine metabolizes to the three DMXs, in equal amounts and the formation of the three DMXs continue to progress at the sixth hour as shown in fig. 11B-D. Serum DMX concentrations were lower for the 10-mg/kg caffeine dose, but reached plateaus for all the caffeine doses.

Figure 12 shows the serum caffeine and total DMX concentration-time profiles of 20 mg/kg caffeine in the presence and absence of three doses of alprazolam (1.25-7 mg/kg). All three alprazolam doses significantly decreased the serum DMX concentrations by a two-way repeated measures analyses of variance (P < .05). However, only 4 mg/kg alprazolam significantly decreased the serum caffeine concentrations, although those values were markedly, but not statistically, lower between 60 to 120 min in the presence of 1.25 and 7 mg/kg alprazolam doses. Furthermore, caffeine concentrations were noticeably lower in the presence of the two higher alprazolam doses (4 and 7 mg/kg) between 3 to 6 hr compared to 1.25-mg/kg dose.


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Fig. 12.   Mean (S.E.) serum caffeine and total DMX concentration-time profiles after p.o. 20 mg/kg caffeine in the presence and absence of 1.25 to 7 mg/kg alprazolam administration. *P < .05 relative to the respective serum caffeine and DMX concentrations without alprazolam.

PK interaction between alprazolam and caffeine by the i.v. route. Both alprazolam and caffeine i.v. serum concentration-time profiles were not altered by concurrent administration of i.v. caffeine and alprazolam, respectively (fig. 13A-B). The PK parameters for alprazolam were not influenced by caffeine (table 2). After i.v. administration, alprazolam was eliminated according to a biphasic process and the PK parameter values estimated from the concentration-time profiles were similar to those for the group 1 (table 1). Caffeine PK parameters ± alprazolam could not be determined accurately using the data in figure 13B, as the t1/2 of caffeine was much longer than that of alprazolam. Caffeine PK parameters listed in table 2 were obtained from a different group of animals (N = 4) under feeding conditions similar to those used in this experiment (C.E. Lau, Y. Wang and F. Ma, unpublished data). After i.v. administration, caffeine was eliminated according to a monophasic process. Vc and Vss for alprazolam were larger than those for caffeine. Alprazolam clearance was markedly greater than for caffeine, 6.9 vs. 0.29 liter/hr/kg, which accounted for its shorter t1/2 compared to caffeine (24.8 vs. 187 min). The two hydroxy metabolites of alprazolam were not detectable by the i.v. route in the presence or absence of caffeine. Alprazolam also did not alter the AUC(0-6 hr) values of caffeine or the three DMXs (table 2, bottom panel).


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Fig. 13.   Mean (S.E.) serum concentration-time profiles for: (A) alprazolam (1.25 mg/kg alprazolam ± 10 mg/kg caffeine); (B) caffeine (10 mg/kg caffeine ± 1.25 mg/kg alprazolam) by the i.v. route.


                              
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TABLE 2
Mean (±S.D.) PK parameters for alprazolam and mean (± S.D.) AUC(0-6 h) values for caffeine and its three DMX metabolites after i.v. 1.25 mg/kg alprazolam ± i.v. 10 mg/kg; mean (±S.D.) PK parameters for caffeine after i.v. 10 mg/kg caffeine dose

PK-PD Modeling: PK and DRL performance

PK-PD model of serum alprazolam concentration-time profiles in the presence and absence of caffeine (20 mg/kg, p.o.). Alprazolam metabolite concentrations were either low or not detectable, and with their relative low potency compared to the parent compound, these metabolites were not included in the PD analysis. Alprazolam distribution and elimination characteristics were determined initially for the i.v. 1.25-mg/kg dose using the mean alprazolam serum concentration-time profile. The bioavailability values of the three s.c. alprazolam doses were complete using the mean data. All the values of the intercompartmental rate constants derived from the i.v. route describe the three s.c. alprazolam doses ± 20 mg/kg caffeine profiles well, except the elimination rate constant values from the central cpt varied somewhat for the two higher alprazolam doses when given alone, as shown in table 3. Figure 10A-B show the mean observed and fitted serum alprazolam concentration-time profiles of the three alprazolam doses ± 20 mg/kg caffeine using these PK parameters, respectively.


                              
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TABLE 3
PK and PD parameters (S.D.) for alprazolam (1.25-7 mg/kg) in the presence and absence of p.o. 20 mg/kg caffeine; PD measure: % baseline in the reinforcement rate in the 45 to 55 sec bin

The integrated PK-PD model predicted that decreases in reinforcement rate in the 45- to 55-sec bin occur within 5 min, and reach maximum effect at approximately 15 to 45 min after alprazolam (1.25-7 mg/kg) ± 20 mg/kg caffeine administration (fig. 14A-B). When alprazolam was given alone, the DRL performance returned to baseline (101.1%, E0) in a dose-related fashion (fig. 14A). For the combined effects, the DRL performance did not return to baseline, but rather, remained at the effect level produced by caffeine (65.5%, E0), Figure 14B and table 3. The equilibration half-lives between serum alprazolam concentration in the central and effect cpts (t1/2keo) for alprazolam ± 20 mg/kg caffeine are 4.4 and 3.0 min, respectively. The IC50 values were similar for the two dose regimens, 0.0201 and 0.0199 µg/ml for alprazolam alone and alprazolam in the presence of 20 mg/kg caffeine, respectively. These results suggested that the interaction between alprazolam and caffeine is not competitive, but independent. Figure 14C shows that DRL performance can be predicted or simulated for any alprazolam dose in the linear range administered alone or in combination with 20 mg/kg caffeine by using the estimated PD parameters.


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Fig. 14.   Mean % baseline reinforcement rate in the 45- to 55-sec bin time profiles and the predicted curves after PK-PD modeling following administration of alprazolam (1.25-7 mg/kg). (A) alprazolam alone; (B) alprazolam + p.o. 20 mg/kg caffeine and (C) simulated effect-time profiles for alprazolam doses ± p.o. 20 mg/kg caffeine by using the estimated PK-PD parameters.

Relation between serum drug concentrations and DRL performance. The data for the first 10 min for both PK and PD (shorter-response and reinforcement rate in the 45- to 55-sec bin) measures were not used in these analyses owing to the equilibration time required for serum alprazolam concentration to the effect cpts (fig. 14). Figure 15 shows the relations between mean serum alprazolam or mean caffeine concentration (N = 4 rats) and mean DRL performance in the 45- to 55-sec bin (N = 7 rats) as constructed using ALLFIT. The 0.125- and 0.4-mg/kg serum alprazolam concentrations were obtained from simulation of the PK parameters (table 3, fig. 10A). The effects of alprazolam on DRL performance were concentration related regardless of alprazolam doses (0.125-7 mg/kg). For example, for the 1.25-mg/kg alprazolam dose, a full concentration-effect relation (from E0 to Emax) was observed, whereas other doses exhibited only partial functions, i.e., high or low doses associated with larger or smaller effects, respectively.


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Fig. 15.   Mean % baseline reinforcement rate in the 45- to 55-sec bin (N = 7) vs. mean serum alprazolam or caffeine concentrations (N = 4). Lines are the curves fitted by ALLFIT.

Unlike alprazolam, for caffeine no single dose possessed a full concentration-effect relation. At the lowest dose (10 mg/kg), acute tolerance occurred, i.e., low concentrations of caffeine produced larger effects than did the higher concentrations (open circles of the right curve in fig. 15). For the higher caffeine doses (20-120 mg/kg), the concentration-effect relations remained approximately similar within a dose. However, construction of the caffeine concentration-effect function for 3-hr session length required all the doses (10-120 mg/kg). It was apparent that alprazolam was more potent than caffeine in affecting the DRL performance as reflected by their IC50 values, 0.0375 and 8.07 µg/ml, respectively.

The relation of the shorter-response rate to the serum alprazolam concentration after alprazolam doses (1.25-7 mg/kg) ± p.o. 20 mg/kg caffeine are shown in fig. 16A-C. After drug administration, the initial stimulation occurred approximately at the highest alprazolam concentration for each dose (the right-most points), although it was less noticeable because the first two time points, 5 and 10 min, were omitted. The shorter-response rate increased again at 60, 90, and 150 min for 1.25, 4 and 7 mg/kg alprazolam doses, respectively, with the respective serum alprazolam concentrations at about 0.06, 0.1 and 0.13 µg/ml, respectively, regardless of the presence of caffeine. For the highest dose (7 mg/kg), the shorter-response rate remained plateaued ± caffeine even at the end of the session with serum alprazolam concentrations in the range of 0.1 µg/ml (fig. 16C).


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Fig. 16.   Mean (S.E.) % baseline shorter-response rate vs. alprazolam serum concentrations for the three doses of alprazolam (1.25-7 mg/kg) ± p.o. 20 mg/kg caffeine.

    Discussion
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

This study investigated PK and PD interactions between alprazolam and caffeine initiated by our previous research (Lau and Wang, 1996), but extended the findings to additional routes of administration, doses, as well as two indices of DRL performance. Two DRL performance measures, reinforced and nonreinforced response rates, not only yielded similar conclusions with respect to drug interaction, but also bore interesting differential relations to serum alprazolam concentrations. Behavior-time profile is the method of choice for studying this kind of drug action and interaction. It would have been simpler to analyze the 3-hr session data in a collapsed form to make inferences, but that would have omitted the dynamics of the on-going behavior and its relation to PK. The bioavailabilities of s.c. alprazolam in the presence and absence of caffeine were high, and were not determined for the i.p. route in the previous study. The lack of PK interaction between alprazolam and caffeine by the i.v. route suggested that the effect of s.c. alprazolam on p.o. caffeine PK was an indirect effect of caffeine absorption. PK models permit the prediction of serum alprazolam concentration for other doses in the linear range, especially for lower doses that yielded drug concentrations below analytical sensitivity. Although the combined effects are not distinguishable in terms of additivity or independence by using the Pöch DRC method, independent interaction is suggested by PK-PD modeling as reflected in the IC50 values (table 3).

To study drug interaction, drug effects need to be reproducible, otherwise tolerance and sensitization might be interpreted as antagonism and synergism, respectively. We have found that within-subject variability in reinforcement rate on DRL 45-sec was not different after two consecutive s.c. doses of midazolam separated by 3 to 5 days (Lau et al., 1996). The effects of alprazolam on DRL performance were similar to those of midazolam, not only in reinforcement rate, but also in shorter-response rate (unpublished data). Furthermore, effects of caffeine + saline at the beginning and end of a combination series on reinforcement rate in the 45- to 55 sec bin (fig. 5) and on shorter-response rate were approximately similar (data not shown), suggesting no tolerance or sensitization occurred as a result of the acute repeated caffeine administration. Thus, the observed combined effects resulted from drug interaction.

The PK of s.c. alprazolam, p.o. caffeine and their combinations mainly mirrored the respective behavior-time profiles of the reinforcement rate in the 45- to 55-sec bin in 3-hr sessions. The onset of alprazolam action was rapid and its duration of action short, although the effect of caffeine remained mainly constant throughout the session, except for the 10-mg/kg dose that showed acute tolerance (fig. 15). As a result, the potency r