Monograph
D07AC18 - Prednicarbate |
Not porphyrinogenic |
NP |
Rationale
Prednicarbate is a corticosteroid used topically for its glucocorticoid activity in the treatment of various skin disorders. Prednicarbate is deesterified to form prednisolone-17-ethylcarbonate and prednisone. Being a topical preparation the systemic exposure is probably insignificant. As for prednisolone and prednisone conclusive pharmacokinetic evidence not compatible with CYP-inducing capacity in clinical use. Being ligand to glucocorticoid nuclear receptor giving rise to endogenous protective glucose production. Feedback inhibition of adrenal androgen production will add to a protective effect. No reports of porphyrogenic side effects in clinical use of prednisolone, but well documented evidence of tolerance in acute porphyria.
Chemical description
11β,17,21-Trihydroxypregna-1,4-diene-3,20-dione 17-(ethyl carbonate) 21-propionate (M=488.6).
Therapeutic characteristics
Prednicarbate may be useful as a topical corticosteroid for the treatment of steroid-responsive dermatoses. However, since it is non-halogenated and is rapidly deesterified following topical absorption, it is much less likely to cause adverse local effects (skin atrophy) and systemic effects (adrenal suppression). Prednicarbate may be particularly advantageous for patients requiring long-term therapy, those at greater risk for adverse reactions, and pediatric patients who are more susceptible to the systemic effects of topical glucocorticoids.
Hepatic exposure
Irrelevant.
Metabolism and pharmacokinetics
In animals, prednicarbate is deesterified to form prednisolone-17-ethylcarbonate and prednisone. As a ligand to glucocorticoid nuclear receptor, prednisolon may participate in PXR activation and subsequent ALAS1 induction. Inducer of gluconeogenetic enzymes. Substrate of CYP3A4, the metabolism affected by CYP-inducers as well as by CYP3A4 inhibitors. No effects on the elimination rate of other CYP-metabolized drugs.
References
# | Citation details | PMID |
---|---|---|
* | Scientific articles | |
1. | Pascussi et al Ann Rev Pharmacol 2008; 48:1-32.
|
|
2. | Thunell. Genomic approach to acute porphyria. Physiol Res 2006.
|
17298222 |
3. | Mol Pharmaceutics 2008; 5:35-41.
Moreau et al. |
27885969 |
* | Drug reference publications | |
4. | Martindale, Micromedex
|
Similar drugs
Tradenames and packages
From some sources, we get a list of packages (United Kingdom, Ireland, Estonia).
Other sources contain more or less "clean" versions of the trade name (Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Lithuania, Norway).
What you see here is the raw data we get from each country, so there will appear to be duplicates. The bold names
are the searchable terms. The gray names that follow are all mapped to the bolded term.
Note: The cleaning is done automatically by a proprietary algorithm, and it may produce errors.
We strive to improve it continuously.
United Kingdom
Batmen ยท Batmen 0.25% cream
© NAPOS 2024