Simulated pharmacokinetics of inhaled caffeine and melatonin from existing products indicate the lack of dosimetric considerations

Numerous commercially available inhalable products claim to improve sleep-wake cycle-related target indications by delivering a wide variety of chemicals like caffeine and melatonin. The resulting exposure-responses from inhaling different doses are unknown and obtaining early understanding of resul...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inFood and chemical toxicology Vol. 187; p. 114601
Main Authors Kolli, Aditya R., Kuczaj, Arkadiusz K., Calvino-Martin, Florian, Hoeng, Julia
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Elsevier Ltd 01.05.2024
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Summary:Numerous commercially available inhalable products claim to improve sleep-wake cycle-related target indications by delivering a wide variety of chemicals like caffeine and melatonin. The resulting exposure-responses from inhaling different doses are unknown and obtaining early understanding of resulting pharmacokinetics is beneficial. This study applied a physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling approach to predict the inhalation pharmacokinetics of caffeine and melatonin for different target indications related to the sleep-wake cycle. The model predicted rapid systemic delivery of caffeine and melatonin based on airway regional deposition of inhaled aerosol. A low inhaled dose of 1 mg of caffeine resulted in a 72.3-times lower plasma maximal concentration and was predicted to not improve cognitive performance task outcomes compared to oral consumption of coffee containing 80 mg of caffeine. Conversely, 2-mg oral and inhaled doses of melatonin under recommended directions of use result in more than 25.1- and 645-times higher plasma concentrations compared to endogenous melatonin, respectively. The recommended doses for inhalation products for potential improvement in the target indications vary widely. Additional research is needed to evaluate the human pharmacokinetics, efficacy, and safety of inhaled products. Given the lack of assessments, inhaled caffeine and melatonin must be consumed with caution as the toxicological concerns are not known and could outweigh the potential beneficial effects. [Display omitted] •Different sleep-wake cycle-related indications require specific systemic exposures.•Low doses of inhaled caffeine from products sold may not improve cognitive performance.•Inhaled melatonin under recommended directions of use may cause high systemic exposure.•Rapidly proliferating inhalation-based consumer products are poorly characterized.•Toxicological concerns outweigh the unproven health benefits of these products.
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ISSN:0278-6915
1873-6351
DOI:10.1016/j.fct.2024.114601