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Pharmacokinetic equivalence study of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug etoricoxib.

PURPOSE: The current study aimed to evaluate whether a generic product of etoricoxib 120 mg film-coated tablet (the test drug) was bioequivalent to the reference product (Arcoxia® film-coated tablet 120 mg).

METHODS: This was a randomized, open-label, two-sequence, crossover study under fasting condition, with a 14-day washout period, involving 26 healthy adult male and female subjects. Blood samples were taken and analyzed for plasma concentrations of etoricoxib (Chemical Abstracts Service [CAS] 202409-33-4) using a high-pressure liquid chromatography-ultraviolet detector (HPLC-UV) system capable of measuring etoricoxib concentrations ranging from 5.00 to 5002.90 ng/mL, with the lowest limit of quantitation of 5.00 ng/mL. A noncompartmental method was used to determine the pharmacokinetic parameters of a single-dose administration of the drug, including the area under plasma concentration-time curve from time zero to the time of last observed concentration (AUC0- t ), the area under plasma concentration-time curve from time zero to infinity (AUC0-∞ ), the maximum plasma concentration ( C max ), the time to reach the maximum plasma concentration ( t max ), and the terminal half-life ( t ½ ).

RESULTS: After a single-dose administration of etoricoxib 120 mg film-coated tablet, the mean (SD) values for the AUC0-72h and C max of the test drug were 45913.42 (13142.19) ng·h/mL and 3155.93 (752.81) ng/mL, respectively; the values for the reference drug were 44577.20 (13541.85) ng·h/mL and 2915.13 (772.81) ng/mL, respectively. The geometric mean ratios (90% CIs) of the test drug/reference drug were 103.40% (98.70%-108.32%) for AUC0-72h and 109.26% (100.18%-119.18%) for C max . No clinically significant differences in t max and t ½ values were found between the test drug and the reference drug. No adverse events were experienced by the subjects during this study.

CONCLUSION: The present study demonstrated that the evaluated generic etoricoxib 120 mg film-coated tablets were bioequivalent to the reference drug.

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