1. Simultaneous Assessment of Hepatic Transport and Metabolism Pathways with a Single Probe Using Individualized PBPK Modeling of 14CO2Production Rate Data▪
- Author
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Franchetti, Yoko and Nolin, Thomas D.
- Abstract
Erythromycin is a substrate of cytochrome P4503A4 (CYP3A4) and multiple drug transporters. Although clinical evidence suggests that uptake transport is likely to play a dominant role in erythromycin’s disposition, the relative contributions of individual pathways are unclear. Phenotypic evaluation of multiple pathways generally requires a probe drug cocktail. This approach can result in ambiguous conclusions due to imprecision stemming from overlapping specificity of multiple drugs. We hypothesized that an individualized physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling approach incorporating 14CO2production rates (iPBPK-R) of the erythromycin breath test (ERMBT) would enable us to differentiate the contribution of metabolic and transporter pathways to erythromycin disposition. A seven-compartmental physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model was built for 14C-erythromycin administered intravenously. Transporter clearance and CYP3A4 clearance were embedded in hepatic compartments. 14CO2production rates were simulated taking the first derivative of by-product 14CO2concentrations. Parameters related to nonrenal elimination pathways were estimated by model fitting the ERMBT data of 12 healthy subjects individually. Optimized iPBPK-R models fit the individual rate data well. Using one probe, nine PBPK parameters were simultaneously estimated per individual. Maximum velocity of uptake transport, CYP3A4 clearance, total passive diffusion, and others were found to collectively control 14CO2production rates. The median CYP3A4 clearance was 12.2% of the input clearance. Male subjects had lower CYP3A4 activity than female subjects by 11.3%. We applied iPBPK-R to ERMBT data to distinguish and simultaneously estimate the activity of multiple nonrenal elimination pathways in healthy subjects. The iPBPK-R framework is a novel tool for delineating rate-limiting and non-rate-limiting elimination pathways using a single probe.
- Published
- 2019
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