The Influence of Green Tea Extract on Nintedanib's Bioavailability in Patients with Pulmonary Fibrosis
Overview
General Medicine
Pharmacology
Authors
Affiliations
Nintedanib is an oral small-molecule kinase inhibitor and first-line treatment for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. Nintedanib is a substrate of the drug efflux transporter ABCB1. Green tea flavonoids --especially epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG)-- are potent ABCB1 modulators. We investigated if concomitant administration of green tea extract (GTE) could result in a clinically relevant herb-drug interaction. Patients were randomized between A-B and B-A, with A being nintedanib alone and B nintedanib with GTE. Both periods lasted 7 days, in which nintedanib was administered twice daily directly after a meal. In period B, patients additionally received capsules with GTE (500 mg BID, >60% EGCG). Pharmacokinetic sampling for 12 h was performed at day 7 of each period. Primary endpoint was change in geometric mean for the area under the curve (AUC). A linear mixed model was used to analyse AUCs and maximal concentration (C). In 26 included patients, the nintedanib AUC was 21% lower (95% CI -29% to -12%; P < 0.001) in period B (with GTE) compared to period A. C did not differ significantly between periods; - 14% (95% CI -29% to +4%; P = 0.12). The detrimental effect was predominant in patients with the ABCB1 3435 C>T wild type variant. No differences in toxicities were observed. Exposure to nintedanib decreased with 21% when administered 60 min after GTC for only 7 days. This is a statistically significant interaction which could potentially impair treatment efficacy. Before patients and physicians should definitely be warned to avoid this combination, prospective clinical validation of an exposure-response relationship is necessary.
Green Tea: Current Knowledge and Issues.
Radeva-Ilieva M, Stoeva S, Hvarchanova N, Georgiev K Foods. 2025; 14(5).
PMID: 40077449 PMC: 11899301. DOI: 10.3390/foods14050745.
Liu Y, Wang C, Li M, Zhu Y, Liu K, Liu Y Front Pharmacol. 2025; 15:1507194.
PMID: 39759448 PMC: 11695318. DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2024.1507194.
Tea consumption and risk of lung diseases: a two‑sample Mendelian randomization study.
Chen L, Deng Y, Wang T, Lin X, Zheng L, Chen X BMC Pulm Med. 2023; 23(1):461.
PMID: 37993830 PMC: 10664472. DOI: 10.1186/s12890-023-02762-4.
Yang H, Cao J, Li J, Li C, Zhou W, Luo J Mol Divers. 2023; 28(4):2603-2616.
PMID: 37486473 DOI: 10.1007/s11030-023-10700-z.
Kciuk M, Alam M, Ali N, Rashid S, Glowacka P, Sundaraj R Molecules. 2023; 28(13).
PMID: 37446908 PMC: 10343677. DOI: 10.3390/molecules28135246.