Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Department of Biomedical Imaging and Image-guided Therapy, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2023 Mar 16;67(3):e0149322. doi: 10.1128/aac.01493-22. Epub 2023 Feb 14.
Transporter-mediated drug-drug interactions (DDIs) are of concern in antimicrobial drug development, as they can have serious safety consequences. We used positron emission tomography (PET) imaging-based pharmacokinetic (PK) analysis to assess the effect of different drugs, which may cause transporter-mediated DDIs, on the tissue distribution and excretion of [F]ciprofloxacin as a radiolabeled model antimicrobial drug. Mice underwent PET scans after intravenous injection of [F]ciprofloxacin, without and with pretreatment with either probenecid (150 mg/kg), cimetidine (50 mg/kg), or pyrimethamine (5 mg/kg). A 3-compartment kidney PK model was used to assess the involvement of renal transporters in the examined DDIs. Pretreatment with probenecid and cimetidine significantly decreased the renal clearance (CL) of [F]ciprofloxacin. The effect of cimetidine (-86%) was greater than that of probenecid (-63%), which contrasted with previously published clinical data. The kidney PK model revealed that the decrease in CL was caused by inhibition of basal uptake transporters and apical efflux transporters in kidney proximal tubule cells. Changes in the urinary excretion of [F]ciprofloxacin after pretreatment with probenecid and cimetidine resulted in increased blood and organ exposure to [F]ciprofloxacin. Our results suggest that multiple membrane transporters mediate the tubular secretion of ciprofloxacin, with possible species differences between mice and humans. Concomitant medication inhibiting renal transporters may precipitate DDIs, leading to decreased urinary excretion and increased blood and organ exposure to ciprofloxacin, potentially exacerbating adverse effects. Our study highlights the strength of PET imaging-based PK analysis to assess transporter-mediated DDIs at a whole-body level.
药物-药物相互作用(DDI)是抗菌药物开发中需要关注的问题,因为它们可能会产生严重的安全后果。我们使用正电子发射断层扫描(PET)成像的药代动力学(PK)分析来评估不同药物(可能引起转运体介导的 DDI)对[F]环丙沙星作为放射性标记模型抗菌药物的组织分布和排泄的影响。在静脉注射[F]环丙沙星后,小鼠接受 PET 扫描,而没有和有预处理的分别使用丙磺舒(150mg/kg)、西咪替丁(50mg/kg)或乙胺嘧啶(5mg/kg)。使用 3 室肾脏 PK 模型评估检查 DDI 中肾脏转运体的参与情况。丙磺舒和西咪替丁预处理显著降低了[F]环丙沙星的肾清除率(CL)。西咪替丁的作用(-86%)大于丙磺舒(-63%),这与以前发表的临床数据相反。肾脏 PK 模型表明,CL 的降低是由肾脏近端小管细胞基底摄取转运体和顶端外排转运体的抑制引起的。丙磺舒和西咪替丁预处理后[F]环丙沙星尿排泄的变化导致[F]环丙沙星的血液和器官暴露增加。我们的结果表明,多种膜转运体介导环丙沙星的管状分泌,并且在小鼠和人类之间可能存在种属差异。同时抑制肾脏转运体的药物可能会引发 DDI,导致尿液排泄减少和血液和器官对环丙沙星的暴露增加,可能会加重不良反应。我们的研究强调了基于 PET 成像的 PK 分析在全身水平评估转运体介导的 DDI 的优势。