Influence of Ethanol on Darunavir Hepatic Clearance and Intracellular PK/PD in HIV-Infected Monocytes, and CYP3A4-Darunavir Interactions Using Inhibition and in Silico Binding Studies

Purpose Although the prevalence of alcohol consumption is higher in HIV+ people than general public, limited information is available on how alcohol affects the metabolism and bioavailability of darunavir (DRV). Methods DRV was quantified by using LC-MS/MS method. All in vitro experiments were perfo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pharmaceutical research 2017-09, Vol.34 (9), p.1925-1933
Hauptverfasser: Midde, Narasimha M., Gong, Yuqing, Cory, Theodore J., Li, Junhao, Meibohm, Bernd, Li, Weihua, Kumar, Santosh
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Purpose Although the prevalence of alcohol consumption is higher in HIV+ people than general public, limited information is available on how alcohol affects the metabolism and bioavailability of darunavir (DRV). Methods DRV was quantified by using LC-MS/MS method. All in vitro experiments were performed using human liver microsomes and HIV-infected monocytic cells. CYP3A4 and DRV/Ritonavir (RTV) docking was performed using GOLD suite 5.8. Results Ethanol (20 mM) significantly decreased apparent half-life and increased degradation rate constant of RTV-boosted DRV but not for DRV alone. Similarly, ethanol exposure increased hepatic intrinsic clearance for RTV-boosted DRV with no significant influence on DRV alone. Ethanol showed a limited influence on intracellular total DRV exposure in the presence of RTV without altering maximum concentration (C max ) values in HIV-infected monocytic cells. Ethanol alone elevated HIV replication but this effect was nullified with the addition of DRV or DRV + RTV. Additionally, inhibitory potency of DRV was significantly reduced in the presence of ethanol. Our docking results projected that ethanol increases the average distance between DRV and CYP3A4 heme, and alter the orientation of DRV-CYP3A4 binding. Conclusions Collectively these findings suggest that DRV metabolism is primarily influenced by ethanol in the liver, but has minor effect in HIV-residing monocytes.
ISSN:0724-8741
1573-904X
DOI:10.1007/s11095-017-2203-6