RESUMEN
The present study assessed the effect of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) activity, a chronic and inflammatory autoimmune disease, on the sinusoidal uptake transporter OATP1B1 using atorvastatin (ATV) as a probe drug. Fifteen healthy subjects, 13 patients with controlled SLE (SLEDAI 0-4), and 12 patients with uncontrolled SLE (SLEDAI from 6 to 15), all women, were investigated. Apparent total clearance of midazolam (MDZ), a marker of CYP3A4 activity, did not vary among the three investigated groups. The controlled and uncontrolled SLE groups showed higher plasma concentrations of MCP-1 and TNF-α, while the uncontrolled SLE group also showed higher plasma concentrations of IL-10. The uncontrolled SLE group showed higher area under the curve (AUC) for ATV (60.47 (43.76-83.56) vs. 30.56 (22.69-41.15) ngâ hour/mL) and its inactive metabolite ATV-lactone (98.74 (74.31-131.20) vs. 49.21 (34.89-69.42) ngâ hour/mL), and lower apparent total clearance (330.7 (239.30-457.00) vs. 654.5 (486.00-881.4) L/hour) and apparent volume of distribution (2,609 (1,607-4,234) vs. 7,159 (4,904-10,450) L), when compared to the healthy subjects group (geometric mean and 95% confidence interval). The pharmacokinetics of ATV and its metabolites did not differ between the healthy subject group and the patients with controlled SLE group. In conclusion, uncontrolled SLE increased the systemic exposure to both ATV and ATV-lactone, inferring inhibition of OATP1B1 activity, once in vivo CYP3A4 activity assessed by oral clearance of MDZ was unaltered. The inflammatory state, not the disease itself, was responsible for the changes described in the uncontrolled SLE group as a consequence of inhibition of OATP1B1, because systemic exposure to ATV and its metabolites were not altered in patients with controlled SLE.