Glycyrrhizic acid is widely applied as a sweetener in food products and chewing tobacco. Habitual consumption of this compound may lead to hypertension and electrolyte disturbances due to inhibition of 11-beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase by the metabolite glycyrrhetic acid. The effect of 130 mg glycyrrhetic acid/day for 5 days on 11-beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity was studied by measuring the cortisol-cortisone ratio in 24-h urine. A twofold increase in this ratio was observed. It took 4 days for the elevated urinary cortisol-cortisone ratio to return to the baseline ratio after cessation of the treatment. The pharmacokinetics of glycyrrhetic acid were studied after the first and last dose. Using data from a previously performed single-dose study and present multiple-dose treatment, a physiologically based pharmacokinetic model for glycyrrhetic acid was developed. The variability of the pharmacokinetics of glycyrrhetic acid in the population studied could be explained for a considerable part by interindividual differences in gastrointestinal transit of glycyrrhetic acid metabolites. The relationship between glycyrrhetic acid exposure and changes in urinary cortisol-cortisone ratio was described by a pharmacodynamic model, using nonlinear mixed-effect modeling. Literature data on the inhibitory effect of glycyrrhetic acid on 11-beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity under various exposure scenarios could be adequately described by the model. Due to the relationship between the pharmacokinetics of glycyrrhetic acid and its inhibitory effect on 11-beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity, reflected by a change in the urinary cortisol-cortisone ratio, this ratio might serve as a noninvasive marker to identify individuals at risk for glycyrrhizic acid over-consumption.
Copyright 2001 Academic Press.