| Literature DB >> 32805361 |
Amais Ahmad1, Xavier Pepin2, Leon Aarons3, Yuya Wang3, Adam S Darwich4, J Matthew Wood2, Christer Tannergren2, Eva Karlsson2, Claire Patterson2, Helena Thörn2, Linette Ruston2, Alex Mattinson2, Sara Carlert2, Staffan Berg2, Donal Murphy2, Helena Engman2, Johanna Laru2, Richard Barker2, Talia Flanagan2, Bertil Abrahamsson2, Shanoo Budhdeo2, Frans Franek2, Andrea Moir2, Gunilla Hanisch2, Shriram M Pathak5, David Turner5, Masoud Jamei5, Jonathan Brown6, David Good6, Shruthi Vaidhyanathan6, Claire Jackson6, Olivier Nicolas7, Stephane Beilles7, Jean-Flaubert Nguefack7, Guillaume Louit7, Louis Henrion7, Celine Ollier7, Laurent Boulu7, Christine Xu7, Tycho Heimbach8, Xiojun Ren8, Wen Lin8, Anh-Thu Nguyen-Trung8, Jin Zhang8, Handan He8, Fan Wu8, Michael B Bolger9, James M Mullin9, Bill van Osdol9, Ke Szeto9, Timo Korjamo10, Sari Pappinen10, Johanna Tuunainen10, Wei Zhu11, Binfeng Xia11, Pierre Daublain11, Suet Wong12, Manthena V S Varma12, Sweta Modi12, Kerstin Julia Schäfer13, Kartrin Schmid13, Richard Lloyd14, Aarti Patel14, Christophe Tistaert15, Jan Bevernage15, Mai Anh Nguyen16, David Lindley17, Robert Carr17, Amin Rostami-Hodjegan18.
Abstract
Oral drug absorption is a complex process depending on many factors, including the physicochemical properties of the drug, formulation characteristics and their interplay with gastrointestinal physiology and biology. Physiological-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) models integrate all available information on gastro-intestinal system with drug and formulation data to predict oral drug absorption. The latter together with in vitro-in vivo extrapolation and other preclinical data on drug disposition can be used to predict plasma concentration-time profiles in silico. Despite recent successes of PBPK in many areas of drug development, an improvement in their utility for evaluating oral absorption is much needed. Current status of predictive performance, within the confinement of commonly available in vitro data on drugs and formulations alongside systems information, were tested using 3 PBPK software packages (GI-Sim (ver.4.1), Simcyp® Simulator (ver.15.0.86.0), and GastroPlus™ (ver.9.0.00xx)). This was part of the Innovative Medicines Initiative (IMI) Oral Biopharmaceutics Tools (OrBiTo) project. Fifty eight active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) were qualified from the OrBiTo database to be part of the investigation based on a priori set criteria on availability of minimum necessary information to allow modelling exercise. The set entailed over 200 human clinical studies with over 700 study arms. These were simulated using input parameters which had been harmonised by a panel of experts across different software packages prior to conduct of any simulation. Overall prediction performance and software packages comparison were evaluated based on performance indicators (Fold error (FE), Average fold error (AFE) and absolute average fold error (AAFE)) of pharmacokinetic (PK) parameters. On average, PK parameters (Area Under the Concentration-time curve (AUC0-tlast), Maximal concentration (Cmax), half-life (t1/2)) were predicted with AFE values between 1.11 and 1.97. Variability in FEs of these PK parameters was relatively high with AAFE values ranging from 2.08 to 2.74. Around half of the simulations were within the 2-fold error for AUC0-tlast and around 90% of the simulations were within 10-fold error for AUC0-tlast. Oral bioavailability (Foral) predictions, which were limited to 19 APIs having intravenous (i.v.) human data, showed AFE and AAFE of values 1.37 and 1.75 respectively. Across different APIs, AFE of AUC0-tlast predictions were between 0.22 and 22.76 with 70% of the APIs showing an AFE > 1. When compared across different formulations and routes of administration, AUC0-tlast for oral controlled release and i.v. administration were better predicted than that for oral immediate release formulations. Average predictive performance did not clearly differ between software packages but some APIs showed a high level of variability in predictive performance across different software packages. This variability could be related to several factors such as compound specific properties, the quality and availability of information, and errors in scaling from in vitro and preclinical in vivo data to human in vivo behaviour which will be explored further. Results were compared with previous similar exercise when the input data selection was carried by the modeller rather than a panel of experts on each in vitro test. Overall, average predictive performance was increased as reflected in smaller AAFE value of 2.8 as compared to AAFE value of 3.8 in case of previous exercise.Entities:
Keywords: Absorption; Biopharmaceutics; Modelling and simulation (M&S); Oral bioavailability (F(oral)); Physiological-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK)
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32805361 DOI: 10.1016/j.ejpb.2020.08.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pharm Biopharm ISSN: 0939-6411 Impact factor: 5.571