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Utility of Common In Vitro Systems for Predicting Circulating Metabolites
被引:0
|作者:
Freiberger, Elyse C.
[1
]
Thompson, Michael P.
[1
]
Zhang, Xiaomei
[1
]
Underwood, Essence B.
[1
]
Lynch, Thomas L.
[1
]
Jenkins, Gary J.
[1
]
Wagner, David S.
[1
]
机构:
[1] AbbVie Inc, N Chicago, IL USA
关键词:
DISPOSITION;
INHIBITOR;
PHARMACOKINETICS;
EXCRETION;
D O I:
10.1124/dmd.124.001732
中图分类号:
R9 [药学];
学科分类号:
1007 ;
摘要:
In vitro systems such as cultured hepatocytes are used early in drug development as a proxy for in vivo data to predict metabolites in human and the potential preclinical species. These data support preclinical species selection for toxicity studies as well as provide early evidence for potential active and reactive metabolites that can be generated in human. Although in vivo data would be best to select preclinical species for a given compound, only in vitro systems are available when selecting toxicity study species. However, as with any in vitro system, the correlation to actual in vivo results can be variable. Understanding the reliability of predicting in vivo metabolites from the various available in vitro assays and determining which system may be most predictive would help de-risk drug development teams' selection process. In this manuscript, we address these questions: can in vitro systems predict circulating metabolites? If so, is predictivity quantitative or indicative of what levels may be seen circulating? Of the currently available in vitro systems, is one better than the others at generating predictive metabolites? To address the first two issues (general in vitro/in vivo predictivity, and whether any in vitro/in vivo correlations are quantitative), we used historical data from Abbott/AbbVie to compare in vitro metabolite profiles with metabolite profiles from in vivo absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion, and clinical studies. In this retrospective analysis of historic metabolite profiling data, in vitro systems predicted similar to 50% of circulating metabolites present in vivo, across preclinical species and human, with no correlation between apparent concentrations in vitro versus in vivo. To address the final question, we selected 10 commercially available compounds with published metabolism data and incubated them in five common in vitro systems (microsomes, liver S9, suspension hepatocytes, HlREL cocultured hepatocytes, and hepatocyte spheroids); the new in vitro metabolite profiling data were compared against published in vivo data to determine whether any individual system was more accurate in generating known major human circulating metabolites. Suspension hepatocytes and co- cultured hepatocytes marginally outperformed the other systems. Current in vitro systems have value early in development when in vivo studies are not feasible and are required for regulatory filings to support preclinical toxicology species selection but should not be treated as wholly representative of a given drug's in vivo metabolism.
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页码:1373 / 1378
页数:6
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