I'm not a biochem expert, but I'll try. Maybe
@Palmetto and
@PepperyPyrone can help me out here too.
Short answer: I don't know if kava
inhibits phase 2 metabolism, but at least some of the metabolites do
go through phase 2 metabolism.
In general your liver's goal when it metabolizes something is to transform it into something that is water soluble, and won't readily be re-absorbed or react with anything. It does this by adding water soluble groups to it such as -OH (hydroxy) groups, and also bulking it up by attaching ionic molecules to it. Phase 1 metabolism refers to chemical changes caused mainly by Cytochrome P450 enzymes, such as hydroxylation, which increases water solubility. Then in Phase 2, conjugation reactions take place with large ionic molecules such as glucuronic acid or our old friend gutathione. Conjugation just means the ion attaches to the drug metabolite and bulks it up and makes it more water soluble. Ref:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drug_metabolism#Phase_II_.E2.80.93_conjugation
What about kava? Looking at kavain metabolism, for example, in this paper they found conjugated glucuronide (and sulfate) metabolites of kavain in people's urine, so that implies that Phase 2 metabolism is definitely happening with kavain. It is certainly happening with the other KLs and FKs too, because it seems to be a pretty universal thing.
https://www.gtfch.org/cms/images/stories/media/tk/tk71_2/Tarbah.pdf
But, like I said, that does
not imply that phase 2 is
inhibited, which would mean that drinking kava would cause phase 2 metebolism to get "maxed out" and thus be less effective for other things you take at the same time. So I actually don't know the answer to the question that you literally asked.