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Physiologically Based Absorption Modelling to Explore the Impact of Food and Gastric pH Changes on the Pharmacokinetics of Entrectinib

Authors :
Neil, Parrott
Cordula, Stillhart
Marc, Lindenberg
Bjoern, Wagner
Karey, Kowalski
Elena, Guerini
Nassim, Djebli
Georgina, Meneses-Lorente
Source :
The AAPS Journal. 22
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Entrectinib is a potent and selective tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) of TRKA/B/C, ROS1, and ALK with both systemic and CNS activities, which has recently received FDA approval for ROS1 fusion-positive non-small cell lung cancer and NTRK fusion-positive solid tumors. This paper describes the application of a physiologically based biophamaceutics modeling (PBBM) during clinical development to understand the impact of food and gastric pH changes on absorption of this lipophilic, basic, molecule with reasonable permeability but strongly pH-dependent solubility. GastroPlus™ was used to develop a physiologically based pharmacokinetics (PBPK) model integrating in vitro and in silico data and dissolution studies and in silico modelling in DDDPlus™ were used to understand the role of self-buffering and acidulant on formulation performance. Models were verified by comparison of simulated pharmacokinetics for acidulant and non-acidulant containing formulations to clinical data from a food effect study and relative bioavailability studies with and without the gastric acid-reducing agent lansoprazole. A negligible food effect and minor pH-dependent drug-drug interaction for the market formulation were predicted based on biorelevant in vitro measurements, dissolution studies, and in silico modelling and were confirmed in clinical studies. These outcomes were explained as due to the acidulant counteracting entrectinib self-buffering and greatly reducing the effect of gastric pH changes. Finally, sensitivity analyses with the verified model were applied to support drug product quality. PBBM has great potential to streamline late-stage drug development and may have impact on regulatory questions.

Details

ISSN :
15507416
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The AAPS Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5dd42f39c2deca8f6a7b824318d4a45c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1208/s12248-020-00463-y