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Physiologically Based Pharmacokinetic Modeling for Selumetinib to Evaluate Drug‐Drug Interactions and Pediatric Dose Regimens

Authors :
Martin Wild
Li Zhou
Tomoko Freshwater
Lokesh Jain
Helen Tomkinson
Karthick Vishwanathan
Diansong Zhou
Sherrie Xu
Sarit Cohen-Rabbie
Stein Schalkwijk
Source :
The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology. 61:1493-1504
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Selumetinib (ARRY-142886), an oral, potent and highly selective allosteric mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 1/2 inhibitor, is approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of pediatric patients aged ≥2 years with neurofibromatosis type 1 with symptomatic, inoperable plexiform neurofibromas. A physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model was constructed to predict plasma concentration-time profiles of selumetinib, and to evaluate the impact of coadministering moderate cytochrome P450 (CYP) 3A4/2C19 inhibitors/inducers. The model was also used to extrapolate pharmacokinetic exposures from older children with different body surface area to guide dosing in younger children. This model was built based on physiochemical data and clinical in vivo drug-drug interaction (DDI) studies with itraconazole and fluconazole, and verified against data from an in vivo rifampicin DDI study and an absolute bioavailability study. The pediatric model was updated by changing system-specific input parameters using the Simcyp pediatric module. The model captured the observed selumetinib pharmacokinetic profiles and the interactions with CYP inhibitors/inducers. The predictions from the PBPK model showed a DDI effect of 30% to 40% increase or decrease in selumetinib exposure when coadministered with moderate CYP inhibitors or inducers, respectively, which was used to inform dose management and adjustments. The pediatric PBPK model was applied to simulate exposures in specific body surface area brackets that matched those achieved with a 25 mg/m2 dose in SPRINT clinical trials. The pediatric PBPK model was used to guide the dose for younger patients in a planned pediatric clinical study.

Details

ISSN :
15524604 and 00912700
Volume :
61
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8fc6aadb5dd9ea1ec15396942a79715c