Literature DB >> 22179024

Strategic integration of in vivo cardiovascular models during lead optimization: predictive value of 4 models independent of species, route of administration, and influence of anesthesia.

Ryan M Fryer1, Paul C Harrison, Akalushi Muthukumarana, Suzanne G Nodop Mazurek, Khing Jow Ng, Rong Rhonda Chen, Kyle E Harrington, Roger M Dinallo, Liguo Chi, Glenn A Reinhart.   

Abstract

The strategic integration of in vivo cardiovascular models is important during lead optimization to enable a wide therapeutic index for cardiovascular safety. However, under what conditions (eg, species, route of administration, anesthesia) studies should be performed to drive go/no-go is open to interpretation. Two compounds, torcetrapib and a novel steroid hormone mimetic (SHM-1121X), both with off-target cardiovascular liabilities, were profiled in 4 in vivo cardiovascular models. Overlapping plasma concentrations of torcetrapib were achieved in all models tested; values ranged from therapeutic to supratherapeutic. In anesthetized rats, intravenous torcetrapib elicited dose-dependent increases in mean arterial pressure (MAP; 2-18 mm Hg above vehicle during the low- and high-dose infusion), and in anesthetized dogs, torcetrapib increased MAP from 4 to 22 mm Hg. In conscious rats, a single oral dose of torcetrapib increased MAP from 10 to 18 mm Hg in the low-dose and high-dose groups, respectively, whereas in conscious dogs, MAP increased from 3 to 12 mm Hg. SHM-1121X produced marked hypotension in the same models. Pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic analysis demonstrated strong correlation across the models tested for both compounds. Results suggest that equivalency across models allows for flexibility to address key issues and enable go/no-go during lead optimization without concern for discordant results. The predictive value of each model was validated with torcetrapib and, when put into practice, led to a decisive no-go for SHM-1121X.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22179024     DOI: 10.1097/FJC.0b013e31824485dd

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cardiovasc Pharmacol        ISSN: 0160-2446            Impact factor:   3.105


  2 in total

1.  Physical Properties and Effect in a Battery of Safety Pharmacology Models for Three Structurally Distinct Enteric Polymers Employed as Spray-Dried Dispersion Carriers.

Authors:  Ryan M Fryer; Mita Patel; Xiaomei Zhang; Katja S Baum-Kroker; Akalushi Muthukumarana; Brian Linehan; Yin-Chao Tseng
Journal:  Front Pharmacol       Date:  2016-10-13       Impact factor: 5.810

2.  The clinically-tested S1P receptor agonists, FTY720 and BAF312, demonstrate subtype-specific bradycardia (S1P₁) and hypertension (S1P₃) in rat.

Authors:  Ryan M Fryer; Akalushi Muthukumarana; Paul C Harrison; Suzanne Nodop Mazurek; Rong Rhonda Chen; Kyle E Harrington; Roger M Dinallo; Joshua C Horan; Lori Patnaude; Louise K Modis; Glenn A Reinhart
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-12-28       Impact factor: 3.240

  2 in total

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