| Literature DB >> 29234936 |
Christoph Niederalt1, Lars Kuepfer2, Juri Solodenko2, Thomas Eissing2, Hans-Ulrich Siegmund2, Michael Block2, Stefan Willmann3, Jörg Lippert3.
Abstract
Proteins are an increasingly important class of drugs used as therapeutic as well as diagnostic agents. A generic physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model was developed in order to represent at whole body level the fundamental mechanisms driving the distribution and clearance of large molecules like therapeutic proteins. The model was built as an extension of the PK-Sim model for small molecules incorporating (i) the two-pore formalism for drug extravasation from blood plasma to interstitial space, (ii) lymph flow, (iii) endosomal clearance and (iv) protection from endosomal clearance by neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn) mediated recycling as especially relevant for antibodies. For model development and evaluation, PK data was used for compounds with a wide range of solute radii. The model supports the integration of knowledge gained during all development phases of therapeutic proteins, enables translation from pre-clinical species to human and allows predictions of tissue concentration profiles which are of relevance for the analysis of on-target pharmacodynamic effects as well as off-target toxicity. The current implementation of the model replaces the generic protein PBPK model available in PK-Sim since version 4.2 and becomes part of the Open Systems Pharmacology Suite.Entities:
Keywords: Antibodies; Biologics; PBPK; Physiologically based pharmacokinetic modelling; Therapeutic proteins
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29234936 PMCID: PMC5845054 DOI: 10.1007/s10928-017-9559-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pharmacokinet Pharmacodyn ISSN: 1567-567X Impact factor: 2.745
Fig. 1Scheme of the PBPK model for protein therapeutics showing connection of organs by blood and lymph flow. For the substructure of the small and large intestine cf. [36]
Fig. 2Representation of catabolism and protection from catabolism by binding to the FcRn receptor in each organ. Note that with the parameterization used in the present model, no uptake of drug from interstitial space and no recycling of drug–FcRn to interstitial space occur. For FcRn an effective pooled concentration within a simplified sub-model is considered (cf. text and Fig. 3). The exchange via pores is effective only for drug
Fig. 3Representation of the sub-model structure for the endogenous IgG and FcRn. Note that with the parameterization used in the present model, no uptake of endogenous IgG from interstitial space and no recycling of endogenous IgG–FcRn to interstitial space occur. The exchange via pores and lymph flow is effective only for endogenous IgG
Parameters used describing vascular endothelium in different organs
| Organs | Hydraulic conductivity, Lp (ml/min/N) | Fraction of flow via large pores, αL | Radius of small pores, rS (nm) | Radius of large pores, rL (nm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bone | 3.24E−04a | 0.05h | 4.5h | 25h |
| Brain | 1.80E−06b | 0.05 | 4.5 | 25 |
| Fat | 3.24E−04a | 0.05 | 4.5 | 25 |
| Gonads | 3.24E−04a | 0.05 | 4.5 | 25 |
| Heart | 5.16E−04b | 0.05 | 4.5 | 25 |
| Kidney | 4.5E−03d | 0.05 | 4.5 | 25 |
| Large intestine | 6.73E−03e | 0.05 | 4.5 | 25 |
| Liver | 1.40E−03c | 0.80i | 9i | 33i |
| Lung | 2.04E−04b | 0.05 | 4.5 | 25 |
| Muscle | 3.24E−04f | 0.05 | 4.5 | 25 |
| Pancreas | 1.16E−03e | 0.05 | 4.5 | 25 |
| Skin | 7.01E−04f | 0.05 | 4.5 | 25 |
| Small intestine | 5.54E−03e | 0.05 | 4.5 | 25 |
| Spleen | 1.40E−03c | 0.80i | 9i | 33i |
| Stomach | 1.43E−03e | 0.05 | 4.5 | 25 |
| Sub-model for endogenous IgG | 6.65E−04g | 0.05 | 4.5 | 25 |
aNo literature data available, same value as for muscle was used
bValues from [88]
cLp for discontinuous endothelium was calculated from the capillary filtration coefficient for liver measured by Granger et al. [89] and the endothelial surface area of the respective organ calculated with the described model heuristic
dValue for peritubular capillaries from [90]
eCalculated from the capillary filtration coefficient of the respective organ measured by Granger et al. [89] and the endothelial surface area calculated with the described model heuristic
fCalculated from the capillary filtration coefficient of the respective organ measured by Renkin et al. [91] and the endothelial surface area calculated with the described model heuristic
gValue calculated as vascular surface area weighted mean over all tissues
hValues for continuous endothelium taken from [46]
iValues for discontinuous endothelium taken from liver data of [92]
Species dependent a priori parameters used within the FcRn binding model
| Parameters | Mouse | Monkey | Human |
|---|---|---|---|
| Plasma concentration of endogenous IgG (µmol/l) | 18a | 75b | 70c |
| Kd for binding of endogenous IgG to FcRn receptor in endosomal space (µmol/l) | 0.75d | 0.132b | 0.63d |
aRef. [93]
bRef. [94]
cRef. [95]
dRef. [96]
Endosomal clearance/FcRn related parameters obtained by parameter estimation
| Free endosomal FcRn concentration in mice (µmol/l) | 38.7 |
| Free endosomal FcRn concentration in monkeys (µmol/l) | 21.0 |
| Free endosomal FcRn concentration in humans (µmol/l) | 80.8 |
| Rate constant for endosomal uptake, kup (min−1) | 0.294 |
| Rate constant for endosomal recycling, krec (min−1) | 0.0888 |
| Association rate constant for FcRn binding, kass (l/µmol/min) | 0.87 |
A priori PBPK parameter used for the tumor tissue
| Volume (ml) | 0.2 |
| Blood flow (ml/min/g) | 0.21a |
| Fraction of vascular space | 0.05b |
| Fraction of interstitial space | 0.45c |
| Lp (ml/min/N) | 1.6E−03d |
| αL | 0.05e |
| rS (nm) | 4.5e |
| rL (nm) | 25e |
aRef. [18]
bTypical value from [97]
cTypical value from [98]
dRef. [99]
eStandard value for continuous endothelium [46]
Values for hydrodynamic compound radius used
| Compounds | Hydrodynamic radius (nm) |
|---|---|
| 7E3, BAY 79-4620, MEDI-524, MEDI-YTE, CDA1, Tefibazumab | 5.34a |
| Domain antibody | 2.43b |
| Inulin | 1.39c |
aValue for antibody from [92]
bCalculated based on molecular weight, see supplemental material, Sect. 1
cRef. [100]
Dissociation constants for FcRn binding in endosomal space for the compounds used in the present study
| Compounds | Ab types | FcRn types | Kd (µM) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7E3 | Mouse | Mouse | 0.75a |
| BAY 79-4620 | Humanized | Mouse | 12.7c |
| MEDI-524 | Humanized | Cynomolgus | 1.196b |
| MEDI-524-YTE | Humanized, Fc variant | Cynomolgus | 0.134b |
| CDA1 and Tefibazumab | Human, humanized | Human | 0.63a |
| Domain antibody | No Fc region | – | 999,999d |
| Inulin | Polysaccharide | – | 999,999d |
aRef. [96]
bRef. [59]
cFitted to PK data
dVirtually no FcRn binding due to missing Fc region
Fig. 4Comparison of simulated (lines) versus experimental (symbols) concentration–time profiles of the 7E3 antibody in wild-type (solid line, circles) and FcRn-knockout mice (dashed line, squares). Experimental data are taken from [27]
Fig. 5Comparison of simulated (lines) versus experimental (symbols) concentration–time profiles in plasma and brain tissue of the 7E3 antibody in wild-type (solid line, circles) and FcRn-knockout mice (dashed line, squares). Experimental data are taken from [58]
Fig. 6Comparison of simulated (lines) versus experimental (symbols) concentration–time profiles for BAY 79-4620 in mice. Experimental data from the autoradiography study, dose 1.25 mg/kg (in-house data)
Fig. 7Comparison of simulated (lines) versus experimental (symbols) concentration–time profiles for BAY 79-4620 in mice. Experimental data from the tissue dissection study, dose 0.025 mg/kg (in-house data)
Fig. 8Comparison of simulated (lines) versus experimental (symbols) concentration–time profiles of the domain antibody dAb2 in mice. Experimental data are taken from [29]. Kidney data were not used during parameter estimation
Fig. 9Comparison of experimental plasma concentration–time profiles for wild type MEDI-524 and the high affinity Fc variant MEDI-524-YTE in cynomolgus monkeys compared to simulation results. Experimental data are taken from [59]
Fig. 10Comparison of experimental plasma concentration–time profiles for CDA1 in humans with simulation results. Experimental data are taken from [60]
Fig. 11Simulated versus observed concentrations for all data used for parameter estimation
Fig. 12Comparison of experimental (symbols) and simulated (lines) plasma and tissue concentrations of inulin in rats for a dose of 20 and 200 mg/kg (plasma only). Experimental data are taken from [61]
Lymph and recirculation flow factors obtained by parameter estimation
| Organs |
|
|
|---|---|---|
| Bone | 6.62E−4 | 0.960 |
| Brain | 7.27E−5 | 0.404 |
| Fat | 7.54E−3 | 0.357 |
| Gonads | 1.11E−2 | 0.960 |
| Heart | 1.47E−3 | 0.960 |
| Kidney | 7.09E−4 | 0.761 |
| Large intestine | 1.44E−2 | 0.179 |
| Liver | 1.99E−2 | 0.960 |
| Lung | 3.56E−5 | 0.010 |
| Muscle | 2.01E−3 | 0.292 |
| Pancreas | 3.03E−2 | 0.010 |
| Skin | 3.52E−3 | 0.617 |
| Small intestine | 1.95E−3 | 0.179 |
| Spleen | 1.99E−2 | 0.010 |
| Stomach | 2.04E−3 | 0.960 |
| Tumor | 3.65E−3 | 0.281 |