| Literature DB >> 29086344 |
Reiner Frey1, Corina Becker2, Soundos Saleh2, Sigrun Unger3, Dorina van der Mey2, Wolfgang Mück2.
Abstract
Oral riociguat is a soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) stimulator that targets the nitric oxide (NO)-sGC-cyclic guanosine monophosphate pathway with a dual mode of action: directly by stimulating sGC, and indirectly by increasing the sensitivity of sGC to NO. It is rapidly absorbed, displays almost complete bioavailability (94.3%), and can be taken with or without food and as crushed or whole tablets. Riociguat exposure shows pronounced interindividual (60%) and low intraindividual (30%) variability in patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) or chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH), and is therefore administered using an individual dose-adjustment scheme at treatment initiation. The half-life of riociguat is approximately 12 h in patients and approximately 7 h in healthy individuals. Riociguat and its metabolites are excreted via both renal (33-45%) and biliary routes (48-59%), and dose adjustment should be performed with particular care in patients with moderate hepatic impairment or mild to severe renal impairment (no data exist for patients with severe hepatic impairment). The pharmacodynamic effects of riociguat reflect the action of a vasodilatory agent, and the hemodynamic response to riociguat correlated with riociguat exposure in patients with PAH or CTEPH in phase III population pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic analyses. Riociguat has a low risk of clinically relevant drug interactions due to its clearance by multiple cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes and its lack of effect on major CYP isoforms and transporter proteins at therapeutic levels. Riociguat has been approved for the treatment of PAH and CTEPH that is inoperable or persistent/recurrent after surgical treatment.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29086344 PMCID: PMC5974002 DOI: 10.1007/s40262-017-0604-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Pharmacokinet ISSN: 0312-5963 Impact factor: 6.447
Fig. 1Chemical structure of riociguat (methyl 4,6-diamino-2-[1-(2-fluorobenzyl)-1H-pyrazolo [3,4-b]pyridin-3-yl]-5-pyrimidinyl(methyl)carbamate)
Fig. 2Summary of riociguat mass-balance, excretion-pattern, distribution, and clearance properties in humans. All numbers are approximate; sum of percentages is 90–95%, which is the recovery of radiolabel in the human mass-balance study (n = 4). Percentages separated by dashes indicate minimum–maximum observed values in the mass-balance study. Ae amount excreted into urine, Ae amount excreted into bile/feces, CL systemic (plasma) clearance, CL renal clearance (via glomerular filtration), CYP cytochrome P450, F absolute bioavailability, M1, M3, and M4 metabolites M1 (BAY 60-4552), M3, and M4, V volume of distribution at steady state
Impact of intrinsic and extrinsic factors on riociguat exposure
| Factors | Effect on riociguat concentration | Comments/recommendations |
|---|---|---|
| Intrinsic factors | ||
| Renal impairment [ | Increase | Riociguat exposure (AUCnorm) was increased in individuals with renal impairment (estimated ratio of exposure vs. healthy controls: 143, 204, and 144% in those with mild, moderate, and severe renal impairment, respectively). Dose adjustment should be performed with particular care. No data are available for patients with creatinine clearance < 15 mL/min or on dialysis, therefore riociguat is not recommended in these patients |
| Hepatic impairment [ | Increase | Riociguat exposure (AUCnorm) was significantly increased in individuals with moderate (Child–Pugh B) but not mild (Child–Pugh A) hepatic impairment (estimated ratio of exposure vs. healthy controls: 153 and 106%, respectively). Dose adjustment should be performed with particular care in patients with moderate hepatic impairment. There is no experience in patients with severe hepatic impairment (Child–Pugh C), and riociguat should not be used in these patients |
| Age (elderly vs. young) [ | Increase | Riociguat exposure showed a non-significant increase in individuals aged 64.5–80 years compared with individuals aged 18–45 years (AUCnorm: + 28%; |
| Sex [ | No relevant difference | Riociguat exposure was similar in both women and men [AUC: + 9%; AUCnorm: − 3% (women vs. men)] |
| Japanese (vs. Caucasian) ethnicity | No relevant difference | Body weight-normalized AUC was slightly higher in Japanese individuals vs. Caucasian individuals (+ 12%). No dose adjustment beyond the individual dose-adjustment scheme is necessary |
| Extrinsic factors | ||
| Food | No relevant difference | AUC was slightly reduced in the fed vs. fasted state (− 11.7%); this difference is not clinically relevant and riociguat can be taken with or without food. However, as a precautionary measure, switches between fed and fasted riociguat intake are not recommended for patients prone to hypotension |
| Smoking [ | Decrease | Riociguat exposure is reduced by 50–60% in smokers compared with non-smokers. Dose adjustments may be necessary in patients who start or stop smoking during riociguat treatment, and patients who smoke may require riociguat dosages higher than 2.5 mg tid if tolerated |
| Drugs affecting gastric pH | ||
| Antacid (Maalox®) | Decrease | Coadministration of aluminum hydroxide/magnesium hydroxide (Maalox®; 10 mL) reduced riociguat AUC∞ by − 34%. Antacids should be taken at least 2 h before or 1 h after riociguat. Further riociguat dose adjustment beyond the individual dose-adjustment scheme is not necessary |
| Omeprazole | No relevant difference | Pre- and coadministration of omeprazole (40 mg qd) reduced riociguat AUC∞ by − 26%. Further riociguat dose adjustment beyond the individual dose-adjustment scheme is not necessary |
| Ranitidine | No relevant difference | Coadministration of ranitidine (150 mg qd) reduced riociguat AUC by approximately − 10%. Further riociguat dose adjustment beyond the individual dose-adjustment scheme is not necessary |
| Ketoconazole [ | Increase | Pre- and coadministration of ketoconazole (400 mg qd) increased riociguat AUC∞ by approximately + 150% ( |
| Clarithromycin [ | No relevant difference | Pre- and coadministration of clarithromycin (500 mg bid) increased riociguat AUC∞ by + 41% ( |
| Levonorgestrel–ethinylestradiol | No relevant difference | Coadministration of levonorgestrel–ethinylestradiol did not alter riociguat exposure. Riociguat pre- and coadministration did not alter the AUC of ethinylestradiol and levonorgestrel (estimated ratios of exposure: 102 and 100%, respectively). Further riociguat dose adjustment beyond the individual dose-adjustment scheme is not necessary |
| Bosentan [ | No relevant difference | Coadministration of bosentan in patients with PAH and CTEPH decreased riociguat AUC by − 27%. This small effect does not require riociguat dose adjustment beyond the individual dose-adjustment scheme |
| Nitrates/nitric oxide donors | Pharmacodynamic interaction | Riociguat (2.5 mg) potentiated the blood pressure-lowering effect of sublingual nitroglycerin (0.4 mg). Syncope was reported in some patients. Coadministration of riociguat with nitrates or nitric oxide donors is therefore contraindicated |
| Sildenafil [ | Pharmacodynamic interaction | Addition of riociguat to sildenafil therapy resulted in additive hemodynamic effects and potentially unfavorable safety signals with no evidence for a positive benefit/risk ratio. Coadministration of riociguat with phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors is therefore contraindicated |
| Warfarin [ | No relevant difference | Pre- and coadministration of riociguat 2.5 mg tid had no relevant effect on warfarin AUC∞ (estimated ratio 101%) or pharmacodynamics (prothrombin time and percentage activities of factor VII, factor II, and factor X). Coadministration of warfarin (25 mg) did not significantly alter riociguat AUC |
| Acetylsalicylic acid [ | No relevant difference | Pre- and coadministration of acetylsalicylic acid (500 mg qd) did not significantly alter riociguat AUC∞ (estimated ratio 96%). Riociguat did not potentiate the effect of acetylsalicylic acid on bleeding time or platelet aggregation. Further riociguat dose adjustment beyond the individual dose-adjustment scheme is not necessary |
AUC area under the plasma concentration–time curve, AUC AUC from time zero to infinity, AUC AUC divided by dose per kilogram body weight, AUC AUC for the dose interval τ at steady state, BCRP breast cancer resistance protein, bid twice daily, C max maximum concentration in plasma, C C max divided by dose per kilogram body weight, CTEPH chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension, CYP cytochrome P450, HIV human immunodeficiency virus, PAH pulmonary arterial hypertension, P-gp P-glycoprotein, qd once daily, tid three times daily
Riociguat exposure by smoking status (non-smokers compared with smokers and non-smokers combined) in healthy individuals and individuals with renal or hepatic impairment
| Median AUC∞,norm (kg·h/L) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Non-smokers | Smokers and non-smokers | |
| Renal impairment study [ | ||
| Normal (CrCl > 80 mL/min) | 22.0 | 21.4 |
| Mild impairment (CrCl 50–80 mL/min) | 40.4 | 33.9 |
| Moderate impairment (CrCl 30–49 mL/min) | 65.2 | 40.9 |
| Severe impairment (CrCl < 30 mL/min) | 40.4 | 33.6 |
| Hepatic impairment study [ | ||
| Mild impairment (Child–Pugh A) | 43.3 | 32.7 |
| Control A | 30.2 | 30.2 |
| Moderate impairment (Child–Pugh B) | 39.4 | 36.3 |
| Control B | 31.5 | 30.5 |
AUC area under the plasma concentration–time curve from time zero to infinity divided by dose per kilogram body weight, CrCl creatinine clearance
Riociguat exposure data at steady state following multiple doses (individual dose adjustment up to 2.5 mg three times daily) of riociguat in PATENT-1 and CHEST-1
| Riociguat pharmacokinetic parameter | Patients with PAH: PATENT-1 study ( | Patients with CTEPH: CHEST-1 study ( |
|---|---|---|
| AUCT (µg·h/L) | ||
| Geometric mean (CV) | 1174 (55.0) | 1433 (45.2) |
| Median | 1226 | 1475 |
|
| ||
| Geometric mean (CV) | 176 (47.8) | 207 (38.9) |
| Median | 178 | 213 |
|
| ||
| Geometric mean (CV) | 113 (69.6) | 145 (58.4) |
| Median | 124 | 152 |
AUC area under the plasma concentration–time curve at steady state, C maximum concentration in plasma, CTEPH chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension, C minimum concentration in plasma, CV coefficient of variation, PAH pulmonary arterial hypertension
Fig. 3Relationship between riociguat plasma concentration and heart rate over 1 min, described using a sigmoid E max model. Relative change in heart rate = 1 + [(0.47 × Cp)/(82.3 + Cp)]. The shaded area represents the effective concentrations as characterized using the sigmoid E max model. Cp riociguat plasma concentration, EC half maximal effective concentration, E half of Emax, E estimated maximal effect.
Reproduced from Frey R, et al. J Clin Pharmacol. 2008;48(8):926–34, with permission. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
| The pharmacokinetics of oral riociguat are characterized by rapid absorption, almost complete bioavailability, and dose-proportional exposure, which correlates with its pharmacodynamic effects. Riociguat exposure varies substantially between patients; this has been addressed by use of an individual dose-adjustment scheme at treatment initiation, which has been proven to be safe and efficacious in phase III studies in patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension and chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension, and appears to be practical and straightforward in clinical practice. |
| Most intrinsic and extrinsic factors that influence riociguat pharmacokinetics or pharmacodynamics do not warrant further dose adjustment beyond the individual dose-adjustment scheme; however, particular care should be exercised during individual dose adjustment in elderly patients and those with moderate hepatic impairment or mild to severe renal impairment. Concomitant use of riociguat with strong multipathway cytochrome P450 and P-glycoprotein/breast cancer resistance protein inhibitors should be avoided or approached with caution because of the risk of hypotension; a reduced starting dose of 0.5 mg three times daily might be considered. Smoking decreases riociguat exposure, and dose adjustments may be necessary in patients who start or stop smoking during treatment. |