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  • BDD Moderators: Keif’ Richards | negrogesic

Is Dihydrocodeine a prodrug like Codeine?

evo4ever

Bluelighter
Joined
Jun 14, 2016
Messages
1,079
Hi all.

I've just been thinking about Codeine and it's drug dosing ceiling effect and the fact that it needs to be metabolised into Morphine by the liver so it can work.

Now is Dihydrocodeine the same? It certainly has active metabolites like Dihydromorphine. But i can't find any info on the Internet about this!

Can anyone help solve this mystery lol?
 
OBJECTIVE:
The metabolism of dihydrocodeine to dihydromorphine, a high affinity mu-opioid receptor ligand in membrane homogenates, is catalyzed by CYP2D6. However, it is not clear whether an active CYP2D6 enzyme is required for opioid receptor-mediated effects in man after standard dihydrocodeine doses.

METHODS:
Whole cell opioid-receptor affinity and effects on cAMP accumulation of dihydrocodeine and its metabolites were determined in differentiated SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells. In a double-blind, 2-period, placebo-controlled randomized crossover pilot study the pharmacokinetics of dihydrocodeine (60 mg single dose) and its metabolites were examined in 5 phenotyped extensive (EMs) and 4 poor metabolizers (PMs) for CYP2D6, and pharmacodynamics were evaluated using a pain threshold model and dynamic pupillometry.

RESULTS:
Displacement binding and cAMP accumulation experiments showed clearly higher affinities (100- and 50-fold) and activities (180- and 250-fold) of dihydromorphine and dihydromorphine-6-glucuronide, respectively, whereas the other metabolites had similar or lower affinities and activities as compared to dihydrocodeine. The clinical study revealed no significant difference in plasma or urine pharmacokinetics between EMs and PMs for dihydrocodeine and its glucuronide. Dihydromorphine and its glucuronides were detectable in EMs only. A clear reduction of initial pupil diameters was observed up to 6 hours postdose in both PMs and EMs, with no obvious differences between CYP2D6 phenotypes. In the pain threshold model no effects were observed in either group.

CONCLUSION:
CYP2D6 phenotype has no major impact on opioid receptor-mediated effects of a single 60 mg dihydrocodeine dose, despite the essential role of CYP2D6 in formation of highly active metabolites.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12665158
So no, it doesn't seem to be a prodrug
 
That's a nice find u got there! So it acts alone probably 90% of it gets to the brain and it's metabolites follow via first pass metabolism. Depends on ROA really.
 
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