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Survey of Pharmaceutical Industry’s Best Practices around In Vitro Transporter Assessment and Implications for Drug Development: Considerations from the International Consortium for Innovation and Quality for Pharmaceutical Development Transporter Working Group

Authors :
Rollison, Helen E.
Mitra, Pallabi
Chanteux, Hugues
Fang, Zhizhou
Liang, Xiaomin
Park, Seong Hee
Costales, Chester
Hanna, Imad
Thakkar, Nilay
Vergis, James M.
Bow, Daniel A.J.
Hillgren, Kathleen M.
Brumm, Jochen
Chu, Xiaoyan
Hop, Cornelis E.C.A.
Lai, Yurong
Li, Cindy Yanfei
Mahar, Kelly M.
Salphati, Laurent
Sane, Rucha
Shen, Hong
Taskar, Kunal
Taub, Mitchell
Tohyama, Kimio
Xu, Christine
Fenner, Katherine S.
Source :
Drug Metabolism and Disposition; 2024, Vol. 52 Issue: 7 p582-596, 15p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The International Consortium for Innovation and Quality in Pharmaceutical Development Transporter Working Group had a rare opportunity to analyze a crosspharma collation of in vitro data and assay methods for the evaluation of drug transporter substrate and inhibitor potential. Experiments were generally performed in accordance with regulatory guidelines. Discrepancies, such as not considering the impact of preincubation for inhibition and free or measured in vitro drug concentrations, may be due to the retrospective nature of the dataset and analysis. Lipophilicity was a frequent indicator of crosstransport inhibition (P-gp, BCRP, OATP1B, and OCT1), with high molecular weight (MW ≥500 Da) also common for OATP1B and BCRP inhibitors. A high level of overlap in in vitro inhibition across transporters was identified for BCRP, OATP1B1, and MATE1, suggesting that prediction of DDIs for these transporters will be common. In contrast, inhibition of OAT1 did not coincide with inhibition of any other transporter. Neutrals, bases, and compounds with intermediate–high lipophilicity tended to be P-gp and/or BCRP substrates, whereas compounds with MW <500 Da tended to be OAT3 substrates. Interestingly, the majority of in vitro inhibitors were not reported to be followed up with a clinical study by the submitting company, whereas those compounds identified as substrates generally were. Approaches to metabolite testing were generally found to be similar to parent testing, with metabolites generally being equally or less potent than parent compounds. However, examples where metabolites inhibited transporters in vitro were identified, supporting the regulatory requirement for in vitro testing of metabolites to enable integrated clinical DDI risk assessment.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTA diverse dataset showed that transporter inhibition often correlated with lipophilicity and molecular weight (>500 Da). Overlapping transporter inhibition was identified, particularly that inhibition of BCRP, OATP1B1, and MATE1 was frequent if the compound inhibited other transporters. In contrast, inhibition of OAT1 did not correlate with the other drug transporters tested.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00909556 and 1521009X
Volume :
52
Issue :
7
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Drug Metabolism and Disposition
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs66663188
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1124/dmd.123.001587