Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: MERETEK UBT KIT W PRANACTIN versus PYLORI CHEK BREATH TEST.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: MERETEK UBT KIT W PRANACTIN versus PYLORI CHEK BREATH TEST.
MERETEK UBT KIT (W/ PRANACTIN) vs PYLORI-CHEK BREATH TEST
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Meretek UBT Kit contains [13C]urea; Helicobacter pylori urease hydrolyzes [13C]urea to produce [13C]CO2, which is detected in breath to indicate active H. pylori infection.
Urea labeled with 13C is hydrolyzed by urease enzyme produced by Helicobacter pylori, producing 13CO2 which is exhaled and detected in breath.
75 mg oral pranactin (citric acid) dissolved in 200 mL water, administered once for urea breath test.
Adults: 75 mg of 13C-urea dissolved in 75 mL of water, administered orally as a single dose. Breath samples collected at baseline and 30 minutes post-dose.
None Documented
None Documented
Not applicable; 13C is a stable isotope that is rapidly converted to 13CO2; elimination half-life of CO2 from the body is approximately 5-10 minutes under normal respiratory conditions. Clinical context: 13CO2 appearance in breath peaks at 30 minutes post-dose.
The elimination half-life of 13C-urea is approximately 0.5–1 hour in patients with normal renal function, reflecting rapid renal clearance. In severe renal impairment, half-life may be prolonged up to 7–10 hours.
Urea (13C) is rapidly hydrolyzed by H. pylori urease in the stomach to 13CO2, which is absorbed and exhaled via the lungs; >99% of the 13C dose is eliminated as exhaled 13CO2 within 24 hours. Pranactin (citric acid) is metabolized to CO2 and water; <2% renal elimination.
13C-urea is excreted renally as intact urea (approximately 85%) and as 13CO2 in breath (approximately 15%). Fecal elimination is negligible. In renal impairment, breath 13CO2 excretion may increase as renal clearance decreases.
Category C
Category C
Diagnostic Agent
Diagnostic Agent