Literature DB >> 23620485

Variability in P-glycoprotein inhibitory potency (IC₅₀) using various in vitro experimental systems: implications for universal digoxin drug-drug interaction risk assessment decision criteria.

Joe Bentz1, Michael P O'Connor, Dallas Bednarczyk, Joann Coleman, Caroline Lee, Johan Palm, Y Anne Pak, Elke S Perloff, Eric Reyner, Praveen Balimane, Marie Brännström, Xiaoyan Chu, Christoph Funk, Ailan Guo, Imad Hanna, Krisztina Herédi-Szabó, Kate Hillgren, Libin Li, Evelyn Hollnack-Pusch, Masoud Jamei, Xuena Lin, Andrew K Mason, Sibylle Neuhoff, Aarti Patel, Lalitha Podila, Emile Plise, Ganesh Rajaraman, Laurent Salphati, Eric Sands, Mitchell E Taub, Jan-Shiang Taur, Dietmar Weitz, Heleen M Wortelboer, Cindy Q Xia, Guangqing Xiao, Jocelyn Yabut, Tetsuo Yamagata, Lei Zhang, Harma Ellens.   

Abstract

A P-glycoprotein (P-gp) IC₅₀ working group was established with 23 participating pharmaceutical and contract research laboratories and one academic institution to assess interlaboratory variability in P-gp IC₅₀ determinations. Each laboratory followed its in-house protocol to determine in vitro IC₅₀ values for 16 inhibitors using four different test systems: human colon adenocarcinoma cells (Caco-2; eleven laboratories), Madin-Darby canine kidney cells transfected with MDR1 cDNA (MDCKII-MDR1; six laboratories), and Lilly Laboratories Cells--Porcine Kidney Nr. 1 cells transfected with MDR1 cDNA (LLC-PK1-MDR1; four laboratories), and membrane vesicles containing human P-glycoprotein (P-gp; five laboratories). For cell models, various equations to calculate remaining transport activity (e.g., efflux ratio, unidirectional flux, net-secretory-flux) were also evaluated. The difference in IC₅₀ values for each of the inhibitors across all test systems and equations ranged from a minimum of 20- and 24-fold between lowest and highest IC₅₀ values for sertraline and isradipine, to a maximum of 407- and 796-fold for telmisartan and verapamil, respectively. For telmisartan and verapamil, variability was greatly influenced by data from one laboratory in each case. Excluding these two data sets brings the range in IC₅₀ values for telmisartan and verapamil down to 69- and 159-fold. The efflux ratio-based equation generally resulted in severalfold lower IC₅₀ values compared with unidirectional or net-secretory-flux equations. Statistical analysis indicated that variability in IC₅₀ values was mainly due to interlaboratory variability, rather than an implicit systematic difference between test systems. Potential reasons for variability are discussed and the simplest, most robust experimental design for P-gp IC₅₀ determination proposed. The impact of these findings on drug-drug interaction risk assessment is discussed in the companion article (Ellens et al., 2013) and recommendations are provided.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23620485      PMCID: PMC3684820          DOI: 10.1124/dmd.112.050500

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Drug Metab Dispos        ISSN: 0090-9556            Impact factor:   3.922


  30 in total

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Journal:  Gastroenterology       Date:  1989-03       Impact factor: 22.682

6.  Application of receiver operating characteristic analysis to refine the prediction of potential digoxin drug interactions.

Authors:  Harma Ellens; Shibing Deng; Joann Coleman; Joe Bentz; Mitchell E Taub; Isabelle Ragueneau-Majlessi; Sophie P Chung; Krisztina Herédi-Szabó; Sibylle Neuhoff; Johan Palm; Praveen Balimane; Lei Zhang; Masoud Jamei; Imad Hanna; Michael O'Connor; Dallas Bednarczyk; Malin Forsgard; Xiaoyan Chu; Christoph Funk; Ailan Guo; Kathleen M Hillgren; Libin Li; Anne Y Pak; Elke S Perloff; Ganesh Rajaraman; Laurent Salphati; Jan-Shiang Taur; Dietmar Weitz; Heleen M Wortelboer; Cindy Q Xia; Guangqing Xiao; Tetsuo Yamagata; Caroline A Lee
Journal:  Drug Metab Dispos       Date:  2013-04-25       Impact factor: 3.922

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Journal:  Eur J Pharmacol       Date:  2003-01-01       Impact factor: 4.432

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  40 in total

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Review 7.  Disruption of small molecule transporter systems by Transporter-Interfering Chemicals (TICs).

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10.  Fusidic Acid Inhibits Hepatic Transporters and Metabolic Enzymes: Potential Cause of Clinical Drug-Drug Interaction Observed with Statin Coadministration.

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