This study was undertaken to determine the bioavailabilityof a 1200 mg miconazole nitrate vaginal ovule in 20 healthy premenopausal females following a single application (Day 1, Group 1) and two applications, 48 hours apart (Day 1 and Day 3, Group 2). In Dose Group 1 (n = 10), the mean Cmax of 10.7 ng/ml occurred at 18.4 hours. The average plasma miconazole concentration was calculated to be 5.7 ng/ml during the 4- to 96-hour time interval. In Dose Group 2 (n = 10), mean Cmax values were 10.8 ng/ml and 12.0 ng/ml and occurred at 18.4 hours (Day 1) and 16.0 hours (Day 3), respectively. Comparing AUC0-48 on Days 1 and 3 (338 vs. 408 ng x h/ml) indicated small accumulation of plasma miconazole, while AUC0-48 obtained from Dose Group 2, Day 1 was similar to that of Dose Group 1 (338 vs. 329 ng x h/ml, respectively). Plasma miconazole profiles were best described by a monoexponential equation with zero-order input. Pharmacokinetic simulations performed on the pooled data from two dose groups (n = 20) suggest a steady-state accumulation after five doses administered daily or three doses taken once every other day. Drug exposure was similar to that of the marketed formulation (MONISTAT 7 vaginal cream), applied once daily for 7 days and more than 100-fold less than that reported when given intravenously or orally.
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