Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Institute of Systems, Molecular and Integrative Biology, University of Liverpool, 70 Pembroke Place, Liverpool, L69 3GF, UK.
Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Department of Medicine, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Clin Pharmacokinet. 2022 Mar;61(3):375-386. doi: 10.1007/s40262-021-01067-1. Epub 2021 Oct 12.
The aim of this study was to simulate the drug-drug interaction (DDI) between ritonavir-boosted atazanavir (ATV/r) and rifampicin (RIF) using physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modelling, and to predict suitable dose adjustments for ATV/r for the treatment of people living with HIV (PLWH) co-infected with tuberculosis.
A whole-body DDI PBPK model was designed using Simbiology 9.6.0 (MATLAB R2019a) and verified against reported clinical data for all drugs administered alone and concomitantly. The model contained the induction mechanisms of RIF and ritonavir (RTV), the inhibition effect of RTV for the enzymes involved in the DDI, and the induction and inhibition mechanisms of RIF and RTV on the uptake and efflux hepatic transporters. The model was considered verified if the observed versus predicted pharmacokinetic values were within twofold. Alternative ATV/r dosing regimens were simulated to achieve the trough concentration (C) clinical cut-off of 150 ng/mL.
The PBPK model was successfully verified according to the criteria. Simulation of different dose adjustments predicted that a change in regimen to twice-daily ATV/r (300/100 or 300/200 mg) may alleviate the induction effect of RIF on ATV C, with > 95% of individuals predicted to achieve C above the clinical cut-off.
The developed PBPK model characterized the induction-mediated DDI between RIF and ATV/r, accurately predicting the reduction of ATV plasma concentrations in line with observed clinical data. A change in the ATV/r dosing regimen from once-daily to twice-daily was predicted to mitigate the effect of the DDI on the C of ATV, maintaining plasma concentration levels above the therapeutic threshold for most patients.
本研究旨在使用基于生理的药代动力学(PBPK)模型模拟利托那韦增强的阿扎那韦(ATV/r)与利福平(RIF)的药物-药物相互作用(DDI),并预测适合治疗同时感染结核分枝杆菌的艾滋病毒(HIV)感染者(PLWH)的 ATV/r 剂量调整。
使用 Simbiology 9.6.0(MATLAB R2019a)设计了一个全身体内 DDI PBPK 模型,并对所有单独和同时给药的药物的报告临床数据进行了验证。该模型包含了 RIF 和利托那韦(RTV)的诱导机制、RTV 对 DDI 相关酶的抑制作用,以及 RIF 和 RTV 对摄取和外排肝转运体的诱导和抑制机制。如果观察到的药代动力学值与预测值在两倍以内,则认为模型得到了验证。模拟了替代 ATV/r 给药方案,以达到 150ng/ml 的谷浓度(C)临床截止值。
根据标准,PBPK 模型成功得到验证。不同剂量调整的模拟预测,将 ATV/r 的方案改为每日两次(300/100 或 300/200mg)可能会减轻 RIF 对 ATV C 的诱导作用,预计>95%的个体 C 超过临床截止值。
所开发的 PBPK 模型描述了 RIF 和 ATV/r 之间诱导介导的 DDI,准确预测了与观察到的临床数据一致的 ATV 血浆浓度降低。从每日一次改为每日两次的 ATV/r 给药方案预计会减轻 DDI 对 ATV C 的影响,维持大多数患者治疗阈值以上的血浆浓度水平。