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Metabolism and Mass Balance of the Novel Nonsteroidal Androgen Receptor Inhibitor Darolutamide in Humans

Authors :
Taavitsainen, Pa¨ivi
Prien, Olaf
Ka¨hko¨nen, Marja
Niehues, Michael
Korjamo, Timo
Denner, Karsten
Nyka¨nen, Pirjo
Vuorela, Annamari
Jungmann, Natalia A.
von Bu¨hler, Clemens-Jeremias
Koskinen, Mikko
Zurth, Christian
Gieschen, Hille
Source :
Drug Metabolism and Disposition; 2020, Vol. 49 Issue: 6 p420-433, 14p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The biotransformation and excretion of darolutamide were investigated in a phase I study. Six healthy male volunteers received a single dose of 300 mg 14C-darolutamide as an oral solution in the fasted state. Plasma, urine, and feces samples were analyzed for mass balance evaluation by liquid scintillation counting (LSC). Metabolite profiling and identification were determined using liquid chromatography mass-spectrometry with off-line radioactivity detection using LSC. Complete mass balance was achieved, with mean radioactivity recovery of 95.9% within 168 hours (63.4% in urine, 32.4% in feces). The administered 1:1 ratio of (S,R)- and (S,S)-darolutamide changed to approximately 1:5, respectively, in plasma. Darolutamide and the oxidation product, keto-darolutamide, were the only components quantifiable by LSC in plasma, accounting for 87.4% of total radioactivity, with a 2.1-fold higher plasma exposure for keto-darolutamide. Aside from darolutamide, the most prominent metabolites in urine were O-glucoronide (M-7a/b) and N-glucuronide (M-15a/b), as well as pyrazole sulfates (M-29, M-24) and glucuronides (M-21, M-22) resulting from oxidative cleavage of the parent. The darolutamide diastereomers were mainly detected in feces. In vitro assays showed that darolutamide metabolism involves a complex interplay between oxidation and reduction, as well as glucuronidation. Interconversion of the diastereomers involves oxidation to keto-darolutamide, primarily mediated by CYP3A4, followed by reduction predominantly catalyzed by cytosolic reductase(s), with aldo-keto reductase 1C3 playing the major role. The latter reaction showed stereoselectivity with preferential formation of (S,S)-darolutamide.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTThe metabolism and excretion of darolutamide in humans revealed that oxidation (CYP3A4) and glucuronidation (UGT1A9, UGT1A1) were the main metabolic routes of elimination. Direct excretion also contributed to overall clearance. The two pharmacologically equipotent diastereomers of darolutamide interconvert primarily via oxidation to the active metabolite keto-darolutamide, followed by reduction predominantly by cytosolic reductase(s). The latter reaction showed stereoselectivity with preferential formation of (S,S)-darolutamide. Data indicate a low drug-drug interaction potential of darolutamide with inducers or inhibitors of metabolizing enzymes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00909556 and 1521009X
Volume :
49
Issue :
6
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Drug Metabolism and Disposition
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs56820196
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1124/dmd.120.000309