| Literature DB >> 33244163 |
Yuan-Dong Zheng1,2, Hua Zhang3,4, Yan Zhan1,2, Yi-Cong Bian3,4, Sheng Ma3,4, Hai-Xian Gan1, Xiao-Juan Lai5, Yong-Qiang Liu5, Yan-Chun Gong5, Xue-Fang Liu5, Hong-Bin Sun6, Yong-Guo Li7, Da-Fang Zhong8,9, Li-Yan Miao10,11, Xing-Xing Diao12,13.
Abstract
Vicagrel, a novel irreversible P2Y12 receptor inhibitor, is undergoing phase III trials for the treatment of acute coronary syndromes in China. In this study, we evaluated the pharmacokinetics, mass balance, and metabolism of vicagrel in six healthy male Chinese subjects after a single oral dose of 20 mg [14C]vicagrel (120 µCi). Vicagrel absorption was fast (Tmax = 0.625 h), and the mean t1/2 of vicagrel-related components was ~38.0 h in both plasma and blood. The blood-to-plasma radioactivity AUCinf ratio was 0.55, suggesting preferential distribution of drug-related material in plasma. At 168 h after oral administration, the mean cumulative excreted radioactivity was 96.71% of the dose, including 68.03% in urine and 28.67% in feces. A total of 22 metabolites were identified, and the parent vicagrel was not detected in plasma, urine, or feces. The most important metabolic spot of vicagrel was on the thiophene ring. In plasma pretreated with the derivatization reagent, M9-2, which is a methylated metabolite after thiophene ring opening, was the predominant drug-related component, accounting for 39.43% of the radioactivity in pooled AUC0-8 h plasma. M4, a mono-oxidation metabolite upon ring-opening, was the most abundant metabolite in urine, accounting for 16.25% of the dose, followed by M3-1, accounting for 12.59% of the dose. By comparison, M21 was the major metabolite in feces, accounting for 6.81% of the dose. Overall, renal elimination plays a crucial role in vicagrel disposition, and the thiophene ring is the predominant metabolic site.Entities:
Keywords: P2Y12 receptor inhibitor; [14C]vicagrel; mass balance; vicagrel; vicagrel metabolism; vicagrel pharmacokinetics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33244163 PMCID: PMC8379165 DOI: 10.1038/s41401-020-00547-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Pharmacol Sin ISSN: 1671-4083 Impact factor: 7.169