CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY
Introduction
Wilson's disease (hepatolenticular degeneration) is an
autosomal recessive metabolic defect in hepatic excretion of copper in the
bile, resulting in accumulation of excess copper in the liver, and subsequently
in other organs, including the brain, kidneys, eyes, bone, and muscles. In this
disease, hepatocytes store excess copper, but when their capacity is exceeded
copper is released into the blood and is taken up in extrahepatic sites, such
as the brain, resulting in motor disorders (ataxia, tremors, speech
difficulties) and psychiatric manifestations (irritability, depression,
deterioration of work performance). Redistribution of excess copper in
hepatocytes leads to hepatocellular injury, inflammation, necrosis, and
eventual cirrhosis. Patients may present clinically with predominantly hepatic,
neurologic, or psychiatric symptoms.
The disease has been treated by restricting copper in the
diet, and the use of chelating agents to bind free copper to reduce its
toxicity and facilitate its excretion. The purpose of initial treatment of symptomatic
patients with a chelating agent is to detoxify copper. Once the patient's symptoms
have stabilized clinically, maintenance treatment begins. Clinical measures are
used to determine whether the patient remains stable (See PRECAUTIONS: Monitoring
Patients).
The active moiety in zinc acetate is zinc cation.
Regardless of the ligand, zinc blocks the intestinal absorption of copper from
the diet and the reabsorption of endogenously secreted copper such as that from
the saliva, gastric juice and bile. Zinc induces the production of
metallothionein in the enterocyte, a protein that binds copper thereby
preventing its serosal transfer into the blood. The bound copper is then lost
in the stool following desquamation of the intestinal cells.
Pharmacokinetics
Because the proposed site of action of zinc is an effect
on copper uptake at the level of the intestinal cell, pharmacokinetic
evaluations based on blood levels of zinc do not provide useful information on zinc
bioavailability at the site of action. Determinations of zinc content in the
liver and the plasma zinc concentration after the oral administration of zinc
acetate have yielded inconsistent results. However, foods and beverages have
been shown to decrease the uptake of zinc thereby decreasing the levels of zinc
in the plasma of healthy volunteers. For this reason, the oral dose of zinc
should be separated from food and beverages, other than water, by at least one
hour.
Pharmacodynamics
In pharmacodynamic studies, the methods used included net
copper balance and radiolabeled copper uptake in Wilson's disease patients.
These studies showed that a regimen of 50 mg t.i.d. of zinc acetate was
effective in inducing a negative mean copper balance (-0.44 mg/day) and an
adequate mean 64Cu uptake (0.82% of the administered dose). A
regimen of 25 mg t.i.d. of zinc acetate was also pharmacodynamically active but
fewer patients have been treated with this regimen than 50 mg t.i.d.
Clinical Trials
In the single center United States trial, 60 patients
with Wilson's disease (31 male, 29 female) who had adequate detoxification of
copper after initial chelation therapy were entered into a copper balance study
of various dose regimens of zinc acetate. Patients were hospitalized to
carefully control food and liquid intake. Food, urine and feces were analyzed
for copper content, and copper balance was defined as the difference between
copper intake and copper elimination/excretion over a 10-day period. A patient
was considered in adequate copper balance if the result was less than +0.25 mg
copper/day. Results for the groups in each dose regimen tested and for adequacy
of individual results are provided in the following table.
Dose Regimen (mg zinc x number of daily doses) |
N* |
Mean Copper Balance (mg/day) |
Number of Patients Inadequately Controlled/T otal number of patients studied |
50 x 3 |
70 |
-0.36 |
6/70 |
50 x 2 |
5 |
-0.16 |
0/5 |
25 x 4 |
5 |
-0.21 |
0/5 |
25 x 3 |
11 |
-0.18 |
1/11 |
37.5 x 2 |
4 |
-0.02 |
1/4 |
75 x 1 |
8 |
0.16 |
2/8 |
25 x 2 |
4 |
0.15 |
1/4 |
25 x 1 |
10 |
-0.37 |
2/10 |
25 x 6 |
12 |
0.05 |
4/12 |
50 x 1 |
1 |
0.1 |
0/1 |
50 x 5 |
11 |
-0.3 |
1/11 |
0 |
6 |
0.52 |
- |
*N = number of copper balance studies. Some patients had
more than one balance study, at different doses or at the same dose at widely
separated intervals. |
While all zinc acetate regimens appeared better than no
therapy, there was little experience with doses other than 50 mg t.i.d. Once
daily dosing did not appear to give satisfactory control in many cases, and would
be inadequate in patients with poor compliance. Based on the limited data
available 25 mg t.i.d. was also thought to be an adequate dose regimen, and not
shown to be inferior to 50 mg t.i.d. Dose related toxicity was not found in
this study.
Symptomatic Patients Initially Treated With A Chelating
Drug
Clinical parameters such as neuropsychiatric status
including evaluation of speech, and liver function tests were followed as the
patients continued therapy on an adequate zinc acetate dose regimen. One hundred
and thirty-three patients were followed for up to 14 years. There was no
deterioration of neuropsychiatric function including speech and biochemical
liver function tests, including bilirubin, transaminases, alkaline phosphatase
and lactic dehydrogenase. The liver function tests remained either within
normal range or slightly above the upper limit of normal for up to 9 years of
treatment.
Pre-symptomatic Patients
In this study 30 pre-symptomatic patients were followed
for up to 10 years. Diagnosis of the presymptomatic Wilson's disease was made
on the basis of a liver copper value greater than 200 μg of copper per
gram dry weight of tissue.
Non-ceruloplasmin copper levels, 64Cu balance
studies, and clinical parameters were assessed. No patient developed symptoms
of Wilson's disease in this cohort. Since the cloning and sequencing of the abnormal
genes in Wilson's disease patients, many mutations have been identified that
may affect the rate of disease progression. No matched historical control has
been compared to this experience, nor has another center replicated this experience.
In a study in the Netherlands, using zinc sulfate, 27
patients were followed up to 29 years by mainly clinical parameters such as
tremors, dysarthria, dystonia, ataxia and Kayser-Fleischer rings. No deterioration
of the clinical status was observed. In some cases, Kayser-Fleischer rings
disappeared and clinical signs and symptoms improved.
Pregnant Patients
Included in a continuing single center United States
trial are 19 symptomatic and presymptomatic women who became pregnant and
continued Galzin therapy. These women delivered 26 live birth babies. At the time
of delivery, the duration of zinc acetate therapy had ranged from 0.7 to 13.7
years. At the time of delivery all patients were using zinc acetate. The zinc
acetate dosage at the start of pregnancy ranged from 25 to 50 mg two to three
times a day. Two patients were being treated with penicillamine at the start of
pregnancy and were switched to zinc acetate during the second month of
pregnancy.
Urinary copper excretion was measured to monitor the
copper status. Twenty-four hour urine excretion of copper indicated adequate
control of copper levels in most patients before and during pregnancies. The
results also indicated that during pregnancy, the mothers' health was protected
by zinc acetate therapy, and no adverse effects on liver or neurological
functions were reported. Limited pregnancy outcome data indicates an incidence
of miscarriages consistent with those in the general population. From this
limited experience, the rate of birth defects is 7.7%, while that in the
general population is (4%). (See PRECAUTIONS, Pregnancy).