Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada (L.L., H.W.) and Department of Drug Metabolism and Pharmacokinetics, Genentech, Inc., South San Francisco, California (M.R.W., C.E.C.A.H.).
Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada (L.L., H.W.) and Department of Drug Metabolism and Pharmacokinetics, Genentech, Inc., South San Francisco, California (M.R.W., C.E.C.A.H.)
Drug Metab Dispos. 2022 Sep;50(9):1170-1181. doi: 10.1124/dmd.122.000885. Epub 2022 Jul 2.
Predicting human pharmacokinetics (PK) during the drug discovery phase is valuable to assess doses required to reach therapeutic exposures. For orally administered compounds, however, this can be especially difficult, since the absorption process is complex. Vismodegib is a compound with unique nonlinear oral PK characteristics in humans. Oral physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) models were built using preclinical in vitro and in vivo data and successfully predicted the oral PK profiles in rats, dogs, and monkeys. Simulated drug exposures (area under the concentration-time curve from time 0 to infinity and C) following oral administration were within twofold of observed values for dogs and monkeys, and close to twofold for rats, providing validation to the model structure. Adaptation of this oral PBPK model to humans, using human physiologic parameters coupled with predicted human PK, resulted in underpredictions of vismodegib exposure following both single and multiple doses. When observed human PK was used to drive the oral PBPK model, oral PK profiles in humans were well predicted, with fold errors in predicted versus observed drug exposures being close to 1. Importantly, the oral PBPK model captured the unique nonlinear, nondose-dependent PK of vismodegib at a steady state. The mechanism responsible for nonlinearity was consistent with oral absorption being influenced by nonsink permeation conditions. We introduce a new parameter, the permeation gradient factor, to characterize the effect of nonsink conditions on permeation. Using vismodegib as an example, we demonstrate the value of using oral PBPK models in drug discovery to predict the oral PK of compounds with nonlinear absorption characteristics in human. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: A physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model was built to demonstrate the value of these models early in the drug discovery stage for the prediction of human pharmacokinetics for compounds with unusual oral pharmacokinetics. In this study, our PBPK model could successfully capture the unique steady-state oral pharmacokinetics of our model compound, vismodegib. The mechanism for nonlinearity can be attributed to nonsink permeation conditions in vivo. We introduce the permeation gradient factor as a parameter to assess this effect.
在药物发现阶段预测人体药代动力学(PK)对于评估达到治疗暴露所需的剂量很有价值。然而,对于口服给药的化合物,这可能特别困难,因为吸收过程很复杂。维莫德吉(Vismodegib)是一种在人体中具有独特非线性口服 PK 特征的化合物。使用临床前体外和体内数据构建了口服生理药代动力学(PBPK)模型,并成功预测了大鼠、狗和猴子的口服 PK 曲线。口服给药后模拟的药物暴露(从 0 到无穷大的浓度-时间曲线下面积和 C)与狗和猴子的观察值相差两倍以内,与大鼠的接近两倍,为模型结构提供了验证。使用人体生理参数和预测的人体 PK 对该口服 PBPK 模型进行了人类适应性调整,导致单次和多次剂量后维莫德吉(Vismodegib)暴露的预测值偏低。当使用观察到的人体 PK 来驱动口服 PBPK 模型时,人体的口服 PK 曲线得到了很好的预测,预测与观察到的药物暴露之间的折叠误差接近 1。重要的是,口服 PBPK 模型捕捉到了维莫德吉(Vismodegib)在稳态下的独特非线性、非剂量依赖性 PK。导致非线性的机制与口服吸收受非恒态渗透条件影响一致。我们引入了一个新的参数,即渗透梯度因子,来描述非恒态条件对渗透的影响。以维莫德吉(Vismodegib)为例,我们展示了在药物发现早期使用口服 PBPK 模型预测具有非线性吸收特征的化合物在人体中的口服 PK 的价值。
构建了一个生理药代动力学(PBPK)模型,以证明在药物发现早期使用这些模型对于预测具有不寻常口服药代动力学的化合物的人体药代动力学的价值。在这项研究中,我们的 PBPK 模型能够成功地捕捉到我们模型化合物维莫德吉(Vismodegib)独特的稳态口服药代动力学。非线性的机制可以归因于体内的非恒态渗透条件。我们引入了渗透梯度因子作为一个参数来评估这种影响。