Clinical pharmacology of adinazolam and N-desmethyladinazolam mesylate following single intravenous infusions of each compound in healthy volunteers

Abstract
The tolerability, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of adinazolam and N-desmethyladinazolam (NDMAD) were assessed following intravenous infusions of 5, 10, 15, and 20 mg adinazolam mesylate, 10, 20, 30 and 40 mg NDMAD mesylate, and placebo. Six subjects per dose level received treatments in a double-blind crossover design. No clinically significant changes were seen in blood pressure, pulse, respiration, or clinical laboratory parameters. Untoward effects typical of benzodiazepines were observed almost exclusively after NDMAD administration. Adinazolam and NDMAD pharmacokinetics were dose-independent. NDMAD clearance was 50% of the value for adinazolam. Adinazolam and NDMAD administrations increased uric acid clearance and decreased plasma uric acid. Adinazolam administration had no significant effect on psychomotor performance. NDMAD administration produced dose related decreases in performance; 286 ng/ml NDMAD produced a 50% decrease in DSST. These results confirm that adinazolam and NDMAD both produce uricosuria and definitively show that adinazolam is devoid of benzodiazepine-like effects at therapeutic concentrations; NDMAD mediates these effects. Uricosuric activity is present for both compounds, but the relative potencies are still unknown.