Utoh Masahiro, Suemizu Hiroshi, Mitsui Marina, Kawano Mirai, Toda Akiko, Uehara Shotaro, Uno Yasuhiro, Shimizu Makiko, Sasaki Erika, Yamazaki Hiroshi
a Laboratory of Drug Metabolism and Pharmacokinetics , Showa Pharmaceutical University , Machida , Japan.
b Pharmacokinetics and Bioanalysis Center, Shin Nippon Biomedical Laboratories, Ltd , Kainan , Japan.
Xenobiotica. 2016 Dec;46(12):1049-1055. doi: 10.3109/00498254.2016.1147102. Epub 2016 Feb 25.
1. The pharmacokinetic data of cytochrome P450 probes in humans can be extrapolated from corresponding data in cynomolgus monkeys, dogs and minipigs using simplified physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling. In this study, the modeling methodology was further adapted to estimate human plasma concentrations of P450 probes based on data from mice transplanted with human hepatocytes or based on data from marmosets. 2. Using known species allometric scaling factors, the observed plasma concentrations of caffeine, warfarin, omeprazole, metoprolol, and midazolam in chimeric TK-NOG mice with humanized liver were scaled to human oral monitoring equivalents. Using the same approach, the previously reported pharmacokinetics of the five P450 probes in marmosets were also scaled to reported equivalents in humans using in vitro metabolic clearance data. 3. Human plasma concentration profiles of the five P450 probes estimated by simplified human PBPK models based on the observed pharmacokinetics in mice with humanized liver and on the reported pharmacokinetics in marmosets were consistent with previously published pharmacokinetic data in Caucasians. 4. These results suggest that mice with humanized liver and/or marmosets could be suitable pharmacokinetic models for humans during research into new drugs, especially when used in combination with simple PBPK models.