Park Jinha, Bae Soo Hyeon, Jeon Sangil, Park Young Hwan, Lee Dong Cheol, Han Seunghoon
AIMS BioScience, Co., Ltd., Seoul, Republic of Korea.
Department of Pharmacology, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
Front Pharmacol. 2025 Aug 21;16:1556618. doi: 10.3389/fphar.2025.1556618. eCollection 2025.
Irinotecan (CPT-11), a topoisomerase I inhibitor, serves as a prodrug for SN-38, its active metabolite with significantly higher cytotoxic potency. Despite its clinical efficacy, irinotecan's therapeutic potential is limited by low fraction of conversion to SN-38, inefficient tumor targeting, and dose-limiting toxicities such as diarrhea and neutropenia. Nanoparticle-based formulations, such as SNB-101, offer a promising solution by encapsulating irinotecan and SN-38, enhancing solubility, improving drug delivery efficiency, and reducing systemic toxicity through tumor-specific accumulation via the enhanced permeability and retention (EPR) effect.
This study aimed to develop a pharmacokinetic (PK) model to differentiate between nanoparticle (NP) and dissolved (S) forms of irinotecan and SN-38 using total plasma concentration data from a Phase I clinical trial of SNB-101 (NCT04640480). The 11-compartment model incorporated prior knowledge of dissolved irinotecan PK and newly observed clinical data to characterize NP-to-S transitions and their respective contributions to total drug exposure.
Results revealed that SNB-101 is predominantly predicted to deliver SN-38 in its nanoparticle form, with NP-SN-38 contributing over 80% of total SN-38 exposure. The high exposure to NP-SN-38 correlated with reduced systemic toxicity compared to conventional irinotecan formulations, despite significantly increased total SN-38 levels.
This reduced exposure to dissolved SN-38 and irinotecan likely underpins the favorable safety profile observed in dose-escalation studies. This model-based approach underscores the utility of nanoparticle formulations in improving drug delivery and highlights the importance of distinguishing between NP and S forms for accurate efficacy and toxicity predictions. The framework may provide a useful tool for optimizing dose selection and accelerating the clinical development of nanoparticle-based therapeutics.
伊立替康(CPT-11)是一种拓扑异构酶I抑制剂,作为其活性代谢产物SN-38的前体药物,SN-38具有显著更高的细胞毒性效力。尽管伊立替康具有临床疗效,但其治疗潜力受到向SN-38转化比例低、肿瘤靶向效率低以及腹泻和中性粒细胞减少等剂量限制性毒性的限制。基于纳米颗粒的制剂,如SNB-101,通过封装伊立替康和SN-38、提高溶解度、改善药物递送效率以及通过增强的通透性和滞留(EPR)效应实现肿瘤特异性积累来降低全身毒性,提供了一种有前景的解决方案。
本研究旨在开发一种药代动力学(PK)模型,利用SNB-101(NCT04640480)I期临床试验的总血浆浓度数据,区分伊立替康和SN-38的纳米颗粒(NP)形式和溶解(S)形式。这个11室模型结合了溶解伊立替康PK的先验知识和新观察到的临床数据,以表征NP向S的转变及其对总药物暴露的各自贡献。
结果显示,主要预测SNB-101以纳米颗粒形式递送SN-38,NP-SN-38占总SN-38暴露的80%以上。与传统伊立替康制剂相比,尽管总SN-38水平显著升高,但NP-SN-38的高暴露与全身毒性降低相关。
溶解的SN-38和伊立替康暴露的减少可能是剂量递增研究中观察到的良好安全性的基础。这种基于模型的方法强调了纳米颗粒制剂在改善药物递送方面的效用,并突出了区分NP和S形式对于准确预测疗效和毒性的重要性。该框架可为优化剂量选择和加速基于纳米颗粒的治疗药物的临床开发提供有用工具。