Physiologically based pharmacokinetic model analysis of the inhibitory effect of vonoprazan on the metabolic activation of proguanil

We previously reported that repeated oral administration of vonoprazan (VPZ) followed by oral administration of proguanil (PG) in healthy adults increased blood concentration of PG and decreased blood concentration of its metabolite cycloguanil (CG) compared with administration of PG alone. In this...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Drug metabolism and pharmacokinetics 2024-02, Vol.54, p.100537-100537, Article 100537
Hauptverfasser: Okubo, Kenjiro, Kudo, Toshiyuki, Yoshihara, Sae, Nakabayashi, Yu, Nakauchi, Kana, Tanaka, Akimi, Saito, Moe, Tsujisawa, Ayumi, Goda, Hitomi, Yamagishi, Yoshiaki, Otake, Chinatsu, Makino, Kosho, Takahashi, Hideyo, Ito, Kiyomi
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:We previously reported that repeated oral administration of vonoprazan (VPZ) followed by oral administration of proguanil (PG) in healthy adults increased blood concentration of PG and decreased blood concentration of its metabolite cycloguanil (CG) compared with administration of PG alone. In this study, we investigated whether this interaction can be quantitatively explained by VPZ inhibition of PG metabolism. In an in vitro study using human liver microsomes, VPZ inhibited CG formation from PG in a concentration-dependent manner, and the inhibition was enhanced depending on preincubation time. Then, a physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model analysis was performed incorporating the obtained inhibition parameters. By fitting the blood concentration profiles of VPZ and PG/CG after VPZ and PG were orally administered alone to our PBPK model, parameters were obtained which can reproduce their concentration profiles. In contrast, when the VPZ inhibition parameters for CG formation from the in vitro study were incorporated, the predicted blood PG and CG concentrations were unchanged; the apparent dissociation constant had to be set to about 1/23 of the obtained in vitro value to reproduce the observed interaction. Further comprehensive evaluation is required, including the possibility that mechanisms other than metabolic inhibition may be involved.
ISSN:1347-4367
1880-0920
DOI:10.1016/j.dmpk.2023.100537