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IMI - Oral biopharmaceutics tools project - Evaluation of bottom-up PBPK prediction success part 3: Identifying gaps in system parameters by analysing In Silico performance across different compound classes.

Authors :
Darwich AS
Margolskee A
Pepin X
Aarons L
Galetin A
Rostami-Hodjegan A
Carlert S
Hammarberg M
Hilgendorf C
Johansson P
Karlsson E
Murphy D
Tannergren C
Thörn H
Yasin M
Mazuir F
Nicolas O
Ramusovic S
Xu C
Pathak SM
Korjamo T
Laru J
Malkki J
Pappinen S
Tuunainen J
Dressman J
Hansmann S
Kostewicz E
He H
Heimbach T
Wu F
Hoft C
Pang Y
Bolger MB
Huehn E
Lukacova V
Mullin JM
Szeto KX
Costales C
Lin J
McAllister M
Modi S
Rotter C
Varma M
Wong M
Mitra A
Bevernage J
Biewenga J
Van Peer A
Lloyd R
Shardlow C
Langguth P
Mishenzon I
Nguyen MA
Brown J
Lennernäs H
Abrahamsson B
Source :
European journal of pharmaceutical sciences : official journal of the European Federation for Pharmaceutical Sciences [Eur J Pharm Sci] 2017 Jan 01; Vol. 96, pp. 626-642. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 Sep 28.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Three Physiologically Based Pharmacokinetic software packages (GI-Sim, Simcyp® Simulator, and GastroPlus™) were evaluated as part of the Innovative Medicine Initiative Oral Biopharmaceutics Tools project (OrBiTo) during a blinded "bottom-up" anticipation of human pharmacokinetics. After data analysis of the predicted vs. measured pharmacokinetics parameters, it was found that oral bioavailability (F <subscript>oral</subscript> ) was underpredicted for compounds with low permeability, suggesting improper estimates of intestinal surface area, colonic absorption and/or lack of intestinal transporter information. F <subscript>oral</subscript> was also underpredicted for acidic compounds, suggesting overestimation of impact of ionisation on permeation, lack of information on intestinal transporters, or underestimation of solubilisation of weak acids due to less than optimal intestinal model pH settings or underestimation of bile micelle contribution. F <subscript>oral</subscript> was overpredicted for weak bases, suggesting inadequate models for precipitation or lack of in vitro precipitation information to build informed models. Relative bioavailability was underpredicted for both high logP compounds as well as poorly water-soluble compounds, suggesting inadequate models for solubility/dissolution, underperforming bile enhancement models and/or lack of biorelevant solubility measurements. These results indicate areas for improvement in model software, modelling approaches, and generation of applicable input data. However, caution is required when interpreting the impact of drug-specific properties in this exercise, as the availability of input parameters was heterogeneous and highly variable, and the modellers generally used the data "as is" in this blinded bottom-up prediction approach.<br /> (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1879-0720
Volume :
96
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
European journal of pharmaceutical sciences : official journal of the European Federation for Pharmaceutical Sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
27693299
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejps.2016.09.037