| Literature DB >> 32902324 |
Ellen Scheers1, Carine Borgmans1, Chi Keung2, Hilde Bohets3, Inneke Wynant1, Italo Poggesi4, Filip Cuyckens1, Laurent Leclercq1, Rao N V S Mamidi5.
Abstract
This article describes in vivo biotransformation and disposition of erdafitinib following single oral dose of 3H-erdafitinib and 14C-erdafitinib to intact and bile duct-cannulated (BC) rats (4 mg/kg), 3H-erdafitinib to intact dogs (0.25 mg/kg), and 14C-erdafitinib to humans (12 mg; NCT02692677). Peak plasma concentrations of total radioactivity were achieved rapidly (T max: animals, 1 h; humans, 2-3 h). Recovery of drug-derived radioactivity was significantly slower in humans (87%, 384 h) versus animals (rats: 91-98%, 48 h; dogs: 81%, 72 h). Faeces was the primary route of elimination in intact rats (95%), dogs (76%), and humans (69%); and bile in BC rats (48%). Renal elimination of radioactivity was relatively low in animals (2-12%) versus humans (19%). Unchanged erdafitinib was major component in human excreta (faeces, 17%; urine, 11%) relative to animals. M6 (O-desmethyl) was the major faecal metabolite in humans (24%) and rats (intact, 46%; BC, 11%), and M2 (O-glucuronide of M6) was the prevalent biliary metabolite in rats (14%). In dogs, besides M6, majority of radioactive dose in faeces was composed of multiple minor metabolites. In humans, unchanged erdafitinib was the major circulating entity. O-demethylation of erdafitinib was the major metabolic pathway in humans and animals.Entities:
Keywords: Disposition; FGFR inhibitor; erdafitinib; excretion; metabolism; pharmacokinetics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32902324 DOI: 10.1080/00498254.2020.1821123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Xenobiotica ISSN: 0049-8254 Impact factor: 1.908