Interactions between the intestinal microbiota and drug metabolism - Clinical implications and future opportunities.

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Tác giả: Dianne Ford

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại:

Thông tin xuất bản: England : Biochemical pharmacology , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 487627

The importance of the intestinal microbita in a multitude of physiological processes is well-evidenced. These include metabolism of nutrients and xenobiotics, biosynthesis of vitamin K and vitamin B12, immunomodulation, maintenance of the gut mucosal barrier integrity and protection against some pathogens. Interindividual differences in the intestinal microbiota composition have impacts on health. The bioavailability and activity of some pharmaceuticals are heavily influenced by interindividual variability in metabolism, which has a genetic basis. This variability, primarily occurring in the liver but also in the intestine, has been studied extensively. Despite the advancement of this field - pharmacogenetics - its integration into clinical practice remains limited for reasons discussed herein. This highlights the even greater challenge of applying emerging knowledge on variability in the gut microbiota to drug therapy. However, ignoring these opportunities would be a mistake. While clinical applications of microbiota-guided drug therapy are currently absent and the ideas in this article are largely theoretical, research is uncovering that in cases where a substantial portion of a drug or its metabolites reaches the colon, or where drugs are formulated for colonic delivery, the gut microbiota can significantly affect drug metabolism and activity. Greater focus should be placed on research into how interindividual variability in the intestinal microbiome can modify pharmaceutical bioavailability and activity. This article is deliberately speculative and exploratory but proposes that, though there are still no clinical examples of microbiome-guided drug therapy, these interactions could afford opportunities for improvements in personalised medicine and also for drug design.
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