| Literature DB >> 36059001 |
Milo Gatti1,2, Federico Pea3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND ANDEntities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36059001 PMCID: PMC9441320 DOI: 10.1007/s40262-022-01173-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Pharmacokinet ISSN: 0312-5963 Impact factor: 5.577
Fig. 1Impact of pro-inflammatory cytokines on different cytochrome P450 (CYP) isoenzymes and transporters retrieved from preclinical studies (adapted with permission from [7]). Red box: reduction in activity more than five-fold; orange box: reduction in activity 2-fold to 5-fold; yellow box: reduction in activity 1.25-fold to 2-fold; green box: no significant reduction in activity; gray box: no data. BCRP breast cancer resistance protein, IFN interferon, IL interleukin, MRP2 multidrug resistance-associated protein 2, OATP organic anion transporting polypeptide, OAT2 organic anion transporter 2, OCT1 organic cation transporter 1, P-gp P-glycoprotein, TNF tumor necrosis factor
Fig. 2Study selection process. PK pharmacokinetic
Studies of acute or chronic inflammatory conditions assessing the effects of cytokine modulation on the pharmacokinetics of CYP substrates
| Study and year of publication | Study population and design ( | Drug and dosage | Inflammatory conditions and biomarker levels | Mechanism | Pharmacokinetic effect | Pharmacodynamic effect | Clinical relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chen et al., 1994 [ | Patients undergoing an allogenic bone marrow transplantation (6) | Cyclosporine (probe for 3A4) | Transplant engraftment Assessment of serum IL-6, TNF-α, CRP, and α1-glycoprotein acid Mean IL-6 serum levels (day 1 post-transplant vs engraftment) 10.7 ± 3.9 units/mL vs 212.2 ± 56.8 units/mL Mean CRP serum levels (day 1 post-transplant vs engraftment) 20.3 ± 2.3 mg/L vs 179.2 ± 12.5 mg/L | Downregulation of CYP metabolism mediated by increase in IL-6 levels | A 3.6-fold increase was found in mean cyclosporine | Not assessed | A correlation between the times of the peaks in IL-6 and cyclosporine levels ( |
| Shedlofsky et al., 1994 [ | Single-sequence phase I study: healthy male volunteers (12) | Antipyrine 250 mg (probe for several CYP isoenzymes), hexobarbital 500 mg (probe for 1A2), theophylline 150 mg (probe for 1A2) before and after a single dose of LPS (day 1) or two doses of LPS (days 1–2) | Sepsis Assessment of IL-6, TNF-α, CRP, and α1-glycoprotein acid Mean serum TNF-α (baseline vs day 1): 4 ± 1 pg/mL vs. 53 ± 34 pg/mL Mean serum IL-6 (baseline vs day 1) 3 ± 1 pg/mL vs 31 ± 36 pg/mL Mean serum CRP (baseline vs day 1): 0 ± 0 mg/dL vs 2.7 ± 0.5 mg/dL | Downregulation of CYP metabolism mediated by increase in pro-inflammatory cytokines levels | Antipyrine CL (baseline vs day 1): 2.33 ± 0.43 L/h vs 2.06 ± 0.40 L/h (12% decrease) Hexobarbital CL (baseline vs day 1): 19.5 ± 5.8 L/h vs 17.9 ± 4.2 L/h (8% decrease) Theophylline CL (baseline vs day 1) 3.30 ± 0.33 L/h vs 3.08 ± 0.60 L/h (7% decrease) Antipyrine CL (baseline vs day 2) 35% decrease (95% CI 18–48) Hexobarbital CL (baseline vs day 2) 27% decrease (95% CI 14–34) Theophylline CL (baseline vs day 2): 22% decrease (95% CI 12–32) | Not assessed | LPS-induced inflammation was associated with significant downregulation of CYP-mediated drug metabolism, occurring several h after initiation of the inflammatory response. The extent of downregulation correlated with the intensity of inflammatory response (increase in IL-6 and TNF-α levels) |
| Shedlofsky et al., 1997 [ | Single-sequence phase I study: healthy female volunteers (7) | Antipyrine 250 mg (probe for several CYP isoenzymes), hexobarbital 500 mg (probe for 1A2), theophylline 150 mg (probe for 1A2) before and after a single dose of LPS (day 1) or two doses of LPS (days 1–2) | Sepsis Assessment of IL-6, TNF-α, CRP, and α1-glycoprotein acid | Downregulation of CYP metabolism mediated by increase in pro-inflammatory cytokine levels | Mean CL decrease for antipyrine: 31% (95% CI 21–41) Mean CL decrease for hexobarbital: 20% (95% CI 10–31) Mean CL decrease for theophylline: 20% (95% CI 10–30) | Not assessed | No sex difference in downregulation of CYP-mediated drug metabolism caused by LPS-induced inflammation |
| Gorski et al., 2000 [ | Double-blind cross-over phase I PK study: healthy volunteers (12) | Tolbutamide (probe for 2C9), caffeine (probe for 1A2), dextromethorphan (probe for 2D6 and 3A4), midazolam (probe for 3A4) | Administration of IL-10 8 mcg/kg/day for 6 days | Downregulation of CYP metabolism mediated by increase in IL-10 levels | Mean caffeine CL (placebo vs IL-10 group): 5.2 ± 1.6 vs 5.5 ± 1.9 Mean unbound tolbutamide CL (placebo v. IL-10 group): 22.7 ± 9.5 vs 23.2 ± 11.4 Mean urinary dextromethorphan/dextrorphan metabolic ratio (placebo vs IL-10 group): 0.020 ± 0.028 vs 0.020 ± 0.049 Mean midazolam CL (placebo vs IL-10 group): 29.2 ± 6.5 vs 25.4 ± 5.7 | Not assessed | Administration of IL-10 did not alter CYP1A2, CYP2C9, and CYP2D6 activities. Conversely, CYP3A-mediated biotransformation was reduced by administration of IL-10, although to a modest extent with no clinically significant effect |
| Carcillo et al., 2003 [ | Case-control PK study: consecutive children with sepsis (51) vs critically ill children without sepsis (6) | Antipyrine 18 mg/kg (probe for 1A2, 2B6, 2C8, 2C9, 2C18, 3A4) | Sepsis Assessment of serum IL-6 levels | Downregulation of CYP metabolism mediated by increase in IL-6 levels | Mean t1/2 10.4 ± 3.6 h (control) vs 30.9 ± 27.4 h (sepsis) Mean CL 0.74 ± 0.31 mL/min/kg (control) vs 0.38 ± 0.28 mL/min/kg (sepsis) | Not assessed | Significant correlation between antipyrine elimination half-life and serum IL-6 levels |
| Moises et al., 2008 [ | Case-control phase I study: pregnant women without documented diseases (10) vs pregnant women with gestational diabetes (6) | Lidocaine 200 mg (probe for 3A4 and partially for 1A2) | Gestational diabetes | Downregulation of CYP3A4 metabolism mediated by increase in pro-inflammatory cytokine levels | Median (IQR) AUC0–∞ values (control group vs gestational diabetes group): 256.01 (238.87–308.07) mcg/mL/min vs. 455.95 (333.48–661.13) mcg/mL/min Median (IQR) CL values (control group vs gestational diabetes group): 781.43 (650.67–839.08) mL/min vs. 438.86 (321.89–605.85) mL/min | Not assessed | The apparent clearance of lidocaine was reduced in diabetic patients compared with healthy women, suggesting that gestational diabetes could inhibit the CYP1A2/CYP3A4 isoforms responsible for the metabolism of this drug and its metabolite |
| Veringa et al., 2016 [ | Prospective observational study: hospitalized patients treated with voriconazole (34) | Voriconazole (probe for 2C9/3A4) 4 mg/kg twice daily | Hematological malignancies, solid organ transplantation, or chronic pulmonary diseases in patients requiring antifungal prophylaxis or treatment Assessment of CRP | Downregulation of CYP metabolism mediated by increase in pro-inflammatory cytokine levels | Voriconazole CL decreased by 0.99299N, and voriconazole Cmin increased by 1.005321 N, where N is the difference in CRP units (mg/L) | Not assessed | The metabolism of voriconazole is decreased during inflammation due to CYP inhibition with a potential increase in serum levels and the need for dosage adjustment |
| Vet et al., 2016 [ | Population PK study: critically ill children (83) | Midazolam (probe for 3A4) 100 mcg/kg LD + 100 mcg/kg/h CI | Sepsis/inflammation in critically ill patients Assessment of CRP, IL-6, TNF-α, IL-1a, IL-1b, IL-2, IL-4, IL-10, IFN-γ, IL-8, MCP-1, MIP-1a, MIP-1b, FGF-β, GCS-F, GMCS-F | Downregulation of CYP3A4 mediated by increase in pro-inflammatory biomarker levels | Midazolam CL decreased by 65.4% when serum CRP levels increased from 10 to 300 mg/L Serum CRP and IL-6 levels are covariate impacting on midazolam CL | Not assessed | Inflammation strongly reduces midazolam CL due to downregulation of 3A4, possibly leading to midazolam over-exposure and associated toxicity |
| Gravel et al., 2019 [ | Case-control PK study: healthy volunteers (35) vs patients with type 2 diabetes (38) | CYP probe drug cocktail: caffeine (1A2), bupropion (2B6), tolbutamide (2C9), omeprazole (2C19), dextromethorphan (2D6), midazolam (3A4), or chlorzoxazone alone (2E1) | Type 2 diabetes Assessment of serum IFN-γ, TNF-α, IL-1, IL-6 levels | Activity of 2B6 ↓ 45% in T2D Activity of 2C19 ↓ 46% in T2D Activity of 3A4 ↓ 38% in T2D Activity of 1A2 ↑ 23% in T2D No difference in activity for 2C9, 2D6, and 2E1 | Plasma C4h caffeine ↑ 23% in T2D Urine Ae0–8h bupropion ↓ 45% in T2D Plasma AUC0–24 tolbutamide ↑ 26% in T2D Plasma AUC0–8 omeprazole ↑ 46% in T2D Plasma AUC0–8 dextromethorphan No difference in T2D Urine Ae0–8 h chlorzoxazone ↓ 9% in T2D Plasma AUC0–24 midazolam ↑ 38% in T2D | Not assessed | IFN-γ and TNF-α serum levels are independent variables associated with intersubject variability in CYP1A2, 2C19, and 2B6 activity in patients with T2D compared with healthy volunteers |
| Trousil et al., 2019 [ | Case-control PK study: healthy volunteers (21) vs patients with stage III/IV epithelial ovarian cancer (22) | Caffeine 100 mg (probe for 1A2), chlorzoxazone 250 mg (2E1), dextromethorphan 30 mg (2D6), omeprazole 40 mg (2C19/3A4) | Advanced-stage ovarian cancer Assessment of CRP, IL-6, IL-8, TNF-α, IL-1β Median inflammatory biomarker levels (volunteers vs patients): CRP: 17 v. 182 mg/L IL-6: 12.89 vs 37.33 pg/mL IL-8: 25.62 vs 71.61 pg/mL TNF-α: 27.71 vs 45.42 pg/mL | Downregulation/upregulation of CYP metabolism mediated by increase in pro-inflammatory cytokine levels | 3.28-fold increase in chlorzoxazone CL in patients with cancer vs healthy volunteers 42% decrease in omeprazole CL in patients with cancer vs healthy volunteers Significant association between pro-inflammatory cytokines/CRP and increased 2E1 activity or 3A4 decreased activity | Not assessed | The presence of tumor-associated inflammation differentially affected CYP4 isoenzyme activity, leading to increase metabolism for 2E1 substrates and decrease metabolism for 3A4 substrates |
| Cojutti et al., 2020 [ | Population PK study in patients with COVID-19 (30) vs patients with HIV (25) | Darunavir (3A4) | COVID-19 Assessment of serum IL-6 levels Median (IQR) serum IL-6 levels (patients with COVID-19 vs patients with HIV): 31 (10–114.75) pg/mL vs 2 (2–2.75) pg/mL | Downregulation of CYP3A4 activity mediated by increase in IL-6 levels | Mean darunavir CL/F 4.1 mL/h (patients with COVID-19) vs 10.3 mL/h (patients with HIV; Median darunavir AUC 161,387.0 (patients with COVID-19) vs 75,727.0 ng·h/mL (patients with HIV; | Not assessed | IL-6 was the only clinical variable highly significantly associated with darunavir CL/F in a multivariate regression analysis ( CART analysis found that an IL-6 level of 18 pg/mL may adequately split the SARS-CoV-2 population in patients with low vs high darunavir CL/F |
| Lenoir et al., 2020 [ | Prospective open-label observational study: patients undergoing elective hip surgery (30) | Caffeine 50 mg (probe for 1A2), bupropion 20 mg (2B6), flurbiprofen 10 mg (2C9), omeprazole 10 mg (2C19), dextromethorphan 10 mg (2D6), and midazolam 1 mg (3A4), measured before (day 0) and after surgery (day 1 and 3) and at discharge | Elective hip surgery Assessment of IL-6, CRP, TNF-α, IL-1β, and IFN-γ | Downregulation of CYP activity mediated by increase in pro-inflammatory cytokine levels | MR 1A2: ↓ 53.2% (day 1 post-surgery) MR 2C19: ↓ 57.5% (day 3 post-surgery) MR 3A4: ↓ 61.3% (day 3 post-surgery) MR 2B6: ↑ 120.1% (day 1 post-surgery) MR 2C9: ↑ 79.1% (day 1 post-surgery) MR 2D6: ↓ 50.0% (no statistical significance) | Not assessed | Surgery and acute inflammation have a major impact on the activity of six major CYPs in an isoform-specific manner of different magnitude and velocity |
Ae amount excretion, AUC area under the concentration–time curve, C concentration, CI continuous infusion, C peak concentration, CL clearance, COVID-19 coronavirus disease 2019, CRP C-reactive protein, C steady-state concentration, CYP cytochrome P450, FGF fibroblast growth factor, GCS-F granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, GMCS-F granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, HIV human immunodeficiency virus, IFN interferon, IL interleukin, IQR interquartile range, LD loading dose, LPS lipopolysaccharide, MCP monocyte chemotactic protein, MIP macrophage inflammatory protein, MR metabolic ratio, PK pharmacokinetic, SARS-CoV-2 severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, T2D type 2 diabetes, TNF tumor necrosis factor, t half-life, ↑ increased, ↓ decreased
Physiologically based pharmacokinetic models investigating the effects of cytokine modulation on the pharmacokinetics of CYP substrates
| Study, year of publication | Study population and design ( | Drug and dosage | Inflammatory conditions and biomarker levels | Mechanism | Pharmacokinetic effect | Pharmacodynamic effect | Clinical relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Machavaram et al., 2013 [ | Physiologically based pharmacokinetic model: patients with rheumatoid arthritis (12) or requiring a bone marrow transplant (5) | Simvastatin 40 mg (probe for 3A4) and cyclosporine 1.5 mg/kg (3A4) | Rheumatoid arthritis or bone marrow transplant Assessment of serum IL-6 levels | Downregulation of CYP3A4 metabolism mediated by increase in IL-6 levels | Elevated simvastatin AUC in virtual patients with rheumatoid arthritis, following 100 pg/mL of IL-6 was comparable to observed clinical data (59% vs 58%) In virtual patients requiring a bone marrow transplant, 500 pg/ml of IL-6 resulted in increase in cyclosporine AUC that was in good agreement with the observed data (45% vs 39%) | Not assessed | The application of physiologically based PK models is suitable for the prediction of drug–disease interactions via suppression of CYP by elevated levels of IL-6 in patients with rheumatoid arthritis or requiring a bone marrow transplant |
| Xu et al., 2015 [ | Physiologically based pharmacokinetic model: virtual patients with non-Hodgkin lymphoma receiving blinatumomab | CYP probe drug cocktail: simvastatin (3A4), midazolam (3A4), theophylline (1A2), caffeine (1A2), warfarin (2C9) | Non-Hodgkin lymphoma Assessment of IL-6 and IL-10 serum levels | Downregulation of CYP metabolism mediated by transient increase in pro-inflammatory cytokines due to blinatumomab administration | Maximal suppression of transient IL-6 on CYP isoenzymes: 3A4: 28%, occurred at 48 h, lasted for 7 days 1A2: 9%, occurred at 48 h, lasted for 7 days 2C9: 17%, occurred at 70 h, lasted for 9 days Mean AUC (95% CI) ratio (transient IL-6 increase vs baseline) Simvastatin 1.9 (1.8–2.0) Midazolam 1.7 (1.6–1.8) Theophylline 1.1 (1.0–1.1) Caffeine 1.2 (1.1–1.3) Warfarin 1.2 (1.0–1.4) Mean (transient IL-6 increase vs baseline) Simvastatin 1.7 (1.6–1.8) Midazolam 1.2 (1.1–1.3) Theophylline 1.0 (1.0–1.0) Caffeine 1.0 (1.0–1.1) Warfarin 1.0 (1.0–1.0) | Not assessed | The magnitude of the suppressive effect of transient cytokine elevation on hepatic CYP enzyme activities is <30% for up to a week. Changes in exposures to substrates of CYP3A4, CYP1A2, and CYP2C9 are expected to be lower than two-fold and the magnitude of CYP suppression is highly dependent on the duration of cytokine elevation |
| Machavaram et al., 2019 [ | Physiologically based pharmacokinetic model: virtual patients with neuromyelitis optica or neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders in North European Caucasian, Japanese, or Chinese populations | CYP probe drug cocktail: caffeine 100 mg (1A2), warfarin 5 mg (2C9), omeprazole 20 mg (2C19), dextromethorphan 30 mg (2D6), midazolam 0.03 mg/kg (3A4), or simvastatin 40 mg (3A4) | Neuromyelitis optica or neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders Assessment of IL-6 serum levels according to a previous study performed in patients with rheumatoid arthritis | Downregulation of CYP metabolism mediated by increase in IL-6 levels | Mean fold change in AUC (steady-state IL-6 levels from 10 to 100 pg/mL): Simvastatin AUC ↑ 2.36-fold Midazolam AUC ↑ 2.08-fold Omeprazole AUC ↑ 1.97-fold Dextromethorphan AUC ↑ 1.37-fold Warfarin AUC ↑ 1.29-fold Caffeine AUC ↑ 1.07-fold | Not assessed | Increasing levels of IL-6 led to predicted increases in exposure to the CYP probe substrates tested, with the exception of caffeine (CYP1A2), being the CYP3A4 substrates the most sensitive to IL-6-mediated suppression There were no notable ethnic differences between the North European Caucasian, Japanese, and Chinese populations in the sensitivity of the change in pharmacokinetics of CYP probe substrates following IL-6-mediated suppression |
AUC area under concentration–time curve, C concentration, CI confidence interval, C peak concentration, CYP cytochrome P450, IL interleukin, PK pharmacokinetic, ↑ increased
Studies assessing the influence of anti-inflammatory biological agents administered during acute or chronic inflammatory conditions on the pharmacokinetics of drugs that behave as substrates of CYP
| Study and year of publication | Study population and design ( | Drug and dosage | Inflammatory conditions and biomarker levels | Mechanism | Pharmacokinetic effect | Pharmacodynamic effect | Clinical relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Schmitt et al., 2011 [ | Multicenter, open-label, randomized, single-sequence disease–drug interaction study: patients with rheumatoid arthritis (12) | Simvastatin 40 mg administered as a single dose on days 1, 15, and 43 (probe for 3A4), and a single infusion of tocilizumab 10 mg/kg on day 8 | Rheumatoid arthritis and assessment of IL-6 and CRP Mean IL-6 serum levels (baseline vs day 15): 50 pg/mL vs 256 pg/mL Mean CRP serum levels (baseline vs day 15): 5 mg/dL vs 0.3 mg/dL | Reversal of CYP downregulation after tocilizumab administration due to IL-6 inhibition | Mean effect ratio (day 15/day 1): Simvastatin AUC0–∞: 43% (90% CI 34–55) Simvastatin (90% CI 33–55) Mean effect ratio (day 43/day 1): Simvastatin AUC0–∞: 61% (90% CI 47–78) Simvastatin (90% CI 46–76) | Not assessed | Tocilizumab approximately halves the simvastatin AUC by almost doubling simvastatin clearance (a CYP3A4-dependent process) as compared with baseline values in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. This finding could be clinically remarkable also for other drugs metabolized by CYP3A4 |
| Zhuang et al., 2015 [ | Open-label, multicenter, phase I study: patients with rheumatoid arthritis (12) | Midazolam 0.03 mg/kg (probe for 3A4), warfarin 10 mg (2C9), omeprazole 20 mg (2C19), caffeine 100 mg (1A2) 1 week before, and 1,3, and 6 week after a single dose of 300 mg sirukumab | Rheumatoid arthritis treated with sirukumab Assessment of serum CRP levels (baseline vs day 14/28/49, after sirukumab administration at day 8): 25.3 mg/L vs 1.8/0.5/0.7 mg/L | Reversal of CYP downregulation after sirukumab administration due to IL-6 inhibition | Geometric mean Midazolam 0.77 (0.56–1.05); 0.69 (0.50–0.94); 0.66 (0.48–0.90) Omeprazole 0.61 (0.42–0.89); 0.62 (0.43–0.91); 0.70 (0.48–1.02) Warfarin 1.00 (0.89–1.15); 1.00 (0.87–1.15); 0.99 (0.86–1.14) Caffeine 1.04 (0.75–1.43); 1.10 (0.80–1.52); 1.05 (0.76–1.45) Geometric mean AUC ratio (1/3/6 weeks after sirukumab administration vs baseline): Midazolam 0.70 (0.51–0.96); 0.65 (0.47–0.89); 0.67 (0.49–0.92) Omeprazole 0.55 (0.32–0.96); 0.59 (0.34–1.02); 0.63 (0.36–1.09) Warfarin 0.82 (0.73–0.92); 0.82 (0.73–0.92); 0.81 (0.72–0.91) Caffeine 1.20 (0.75–1.91); 1.34 (0.84–2.15); 1.28 (0.80–2.04) | Not assessed | Sirukumab may reverse IL-6-mediated suppression of CYP3A, CYP2C9, and CYP2C19 activities in patients with active inflammation associated with rheumatoid arthritis |
| Tran et al., 2016 [ | Two-sequences phase I study: patients with multiple sclerosis (20) | Caffeine 200 mg (probe for 1A2), warfarin 10 mg (2C9), omeprazole 40 mg (2C19), dextromethorphan 30 mg (2D6), midazolam 5 mg (3A4) before and after administration of daclizumab 150 mg every 4 weeks | Multiple sclerosis | Potential reversal downregulation of CYP mediated by IL-2 blockade | Geometric mean AUC ratio (probe substrate with daclizumab/probe substrate alone): Caffeine 1.03 (90% CI 0.93–1.14) Midazolam 1.01 (90% CI 0.89–1.15) Warfarin 1.00 (90% CI 0.95–1.06) Omeprazole 1.00 (90% CI 0.88–1.13) Dextromethorphan 1.01 (90% CI 0.76–1.34) | Not assessed | In patients with multiple sclerosis, daclizumab has no effect on CYP activity |
| Jiang et al., 2016 [ | Physiologically based pharmacokinetic model: patients with rheumatoid arthritis (12) | Midazolam 0.03 mg/kg (probe for 3A4), warfarin 10 mg (2C9), caffeine 100 mg (1A2), and omeprazole 20 mg (2C19) administered one week before (day 1) and three weeks after (day 29) sirukumab 300 mg single dose | Rheumatoid arthritis and assessment of IL-6 | Reversal of CYP downregulation after sirukumab administration due to IL-6 inhibition | Geometric mean AUC ratio (day 29/day 1): Midazolam 0.65 (90% CI 0.47–0.89) Omeprazole 0.59 (90% CI 0.34–1.02) Warfarin 0.82 (90% CI 0.73–0.92) Caffeine 1.34 (90% CI 0.84–2.15) | Not assessed | Sirukumab may reverse CYP downregulation affecting CYP3A4, CYP2C9, and CYP2C19, resulting in a decrease of substrate exposure (range 20–40%) compared with inflammatory conditions |
| Lee et al., 2017 [ | Open-label, single-sequence, nonrandomized, phase I study: patients with rheumatoid arthritis (19) | Simvastatin 40 mg (probe for 3A4) administered one day before and seven days after sarilumab 200 mg | Rheumatoid arthritis and assessment of IL-6 and CRP Mean IL-6 serum levels (baseline vs day 8): 47.5 pg/mL vs 219.9 pg/mL Mean CRP serum levels (baseline vs day 8): 22.1 mg/L vs 1.9 mg/L | Reversal of CYP3A4 downregulation after sarilumab administration due to IL-6 inhibition | Mean effect ratio (day 8/baseline): Simvastatin AUC0–∞: 54.7% (90% CI 47.2–63.3) Simvastatin (90% CI 42.2–69.4) | Not assessed | Sarilumab treatment resulted in a reduction in exposure of simvastatin, consistent with reversal of IL-6- mediated CYP3A4 suppression in patients with active rheumatoid arthritis |
| Davis et al., 2018 [ | Open-label, multicenter study, single-sequence phase I PK study: patients with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis (14) | Midazolam 2 mg (probe for 3A4), omeprazole 20 mg (2C19), warfarin 10 mg (2C9), caffeine 100 mg (1A2), and metoprolol 100 mg (2D6) administered before (day 1) and after dupilumab 300 mg/week (day 36) | Moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis and assessment of CCL-17 and LDH Mean CCL-17 serum levels (baseline vs day 35): 8060 ± 17,200 pg/mL vs 667 ± 402 pg/mL | Potential downregulation of CYP isoenzymes due to increased IL-4/IL-13 levels and reversal of activity after dupilumab administration | Geometric mean AUC ratio (day 36/day 1): Midazolam 0.98 (90% CI 0.87–1.09) Omeprazole 1.00 (90% CI 0.88–1.12) Warfarin 0.90 (90% CI 0.83–0.98) Caffeine 1.12 (90% CI 0.87–1.45) Metoprolol 1.29 (90% CI 1.10–1.51) | Not assessed | No drug–disease interaction was identified in patients with type 2 inflammation. Blockade of IL-4/IL-13 signaling in patients with type 2 inflammation does not appear to significantly affect CYP enzyme activities; the use of dupilumab in patients with atopic dermatitis is unlikely to influence the pharmacokinetics of CYP substrates |
| Khalilieh et al., 2018 [ | Open-label, fixed-sequence, two-period trial: patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis (20) | Midazolam 2 mg (probe for 3A4), warfarin 10 mg (2C9), caffeine 200 mg (1A2), omeprazole 40 mg (2C19), and dextromethorphan 30 mg (2D6) administered at day 1 (period 1). In period 2, probe cocktail was administered on day 57 after tildrakizumab 200 mg on day 1 and 29 | Moderate-to-severe psoriasis and assessment of CRP and IL-6 | Potential reversal of CYP downregulation after tildrakizumab administration due to IL-23 inhibition | Geometric mean AUC ratio (probe + tildrakizumab vs probe alone) Midazolam 1.11 (90% CI 0.94–1.32) Omeprazole 0.96 (90% CI 0.77–1.19) Warfarin 1.07 (90% CI 0.98–1.17) Dextromethorphan 1.20 (90% CI 1.00–1.45) Caffeine 1.14 (90% CI 1.01–1.28) Geometric mean (probe + tildrakizumab vs probe alone) Midazolam 1.06 (90% CI 0.86–1.29) Omeprazole 0.99 (90% CI 0.85–1.15) Warfarin 0.99 (90% CI 0.95–1.03) Dextromethorphan 1.17 (90% CI 0.96–1.43) Caffeine 0.96 (90% CI 0.88–1.05) | Not assessed | Tildrakizumab had no clinically relevant effect on the pharmacokinetics of any of the probe substrates tested, possibly related to the lower degree of inflammation in psoriasis compared with other pro-inflammatory diseases. There were no clinically relevant changes in IL-6 or CRP before and after tildrakizumab administration |
| Bruin et al., 2019 [ | Open-label, multicenter study, single-sequence phase I PK study: patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis (24) | Midazolam 5 mg (3A4) administered before (day 0) and after secukinumab 300 mg/week (day 8 and 36) | Moderate-to-severe psoriasis and assessment of CRP, TNF-α, IL-6, and BD-2 | Potential reversal of CYP3A4 downregulation after secukinumab administration due to IL-17A inhibition | Midazolam AUC0–∞ day8/baseline 0.99 (90% CI 0.88–1.12) Midazolam AUC0–∞ day36/baseline 0.97 (90% CI 0.85–1.09) | Not assessed | Secukinumab can be used in the treatment of psoriasis without significant PK interactions with drugs metabolized by CYP3A4. Because of only slightly increased cytokine levels, such as IL-17A and IL-6, in patients with psoriasis, a reduction in cytokine levels to levels observed in healthy subjects will have no impact on any of the CYP activities |
| Zhu et al., 2020 [ | Open-label, multicenter, phase I study: patients with moderate-to-severe psoriasis (14) | Midazolam (probe for 3A4), warfarin (2C9), omeprazole (2C19), dextromethorphan (2D6), and caffeine (1A2) before (day 1) and after (day 15 and 36) guselkumab 200 mg administration | Moderate-to-severe psoriasis | Potential reversal of CYP downregulation after guselkumab administration due to IL-23 inhibition | Geometric mean Midazolam 1.11 (0.75–1.65); 1.14 (0.77–1.69) Warfarin 1.07 (0.90–1.27); 0.90 (0.74–1.11) Omeprazole 0.96 (0.72–1.28); 0.96 (0.67–1.36) Dextromethorphan 1.06 (0.46–2.43); 1.33 (0.55–3.18) Caffeine 1.07 (0.94–1.22); 1.06 (0.89–1.26) Geometric mean AUC ratio (15/36 day vs day 1): Midazolam 1.01 (0.70–1.45); 1.04 (0.75–1.44) Warfarin 1.12 (0.90–1.40); 1.05 (0.82–1.36) Omeprazole 0.96 (0.61–1.52); 1.19 (0.75–1.90) Dextromethorphan 1.13 (0.56–2.26); 1.24 (0.46– 3.31) Caffeine 1.00 (0.77–1.31); 1.02 (0.77–1.35) | Not assessed | No significant drug interactions between guselkumab and substrates of various CYP enzymes are reported. Dose adjustment for concomitant CYP substrates in patients treated with guselkumab does not seem to be necessary |
Ae amount excretion, AUC area under the concentration–time curve, C concentration, CCL-17 chemokine 17, CI confidence interval, C peak concentrations, CRP C-reactive protein, CYP cytochrome P450, IL interleukin, LDH lactate dehydrogenase, PK pharmacokinetic, T2D type 2 diabetes, TNF-α tumor necrosis factor-α
Fig. 3a Main determinants involved in the impact of systemic inflammation on the patient’s phenotypic response to a specific victim drug. b Illustration of the applicability of the ‘patient-centered’ strategy for the assessment of the impact of inflammation-induced metabolism downregulation in a specific clinical scenario (a pediatric patient undergoing an allogenic hematopoietic stem cell transplant [HSCT] requiring primary prophylaxis for invasive fungal infections [IFI] with voriconazole). In this case, voriconazole as the victim drug exhibits peculiar pharmacokinetic (PK) features (i.e., non-linear kinetic, narrow therapeutic index, extensive metabolism by cytochrome P450 [CYP] 2C19 and CYP3A4 isoenzymes coupled with inhibitory activity on CYP, a high risk of clinically relevant interactions with concomitant drugs, pharmacogenetic variability). These features should be carefully contextualized with the short-term to medium-term risk of cytokine release syndrome (CRS) caused by transplant engraftment or febrile neutropenia, the magnitude of CYP downregulation over time, and the possible administration of tocilizumab for the management of severe CRS. A real-time, therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM)-guided dosing adjustment coupled with intensive monitoring of inflammatory biomarkers could be suggested during the entire treatment with voriconazole. CRP C-reactive protein, IL-6 interleukin-6
| Inflammation represents an under-appreciated variable that may significantly impact the patient’s phenotypic drug response. The impact of inflammation-induced downregulation of CYP450 (CYP)-mediated drug metabolism and or of drug transporter-mediated uptake was assessed for a limited number of victim drugs. |
| Pro-inflammatory cytokines showed a moderate inhibitory effect on CYP3A4, and a weak-to-moderate inhibitory effect on CYP2C9-mediated, CYP2C19-mediated, and CYP1A2-mediated drug metabolism. A positive relationship between the magnitude of the pro-inflammatory cytokine levels over time and the degree of inhibition of CYP-mediated metabolism or transporter-mediated uptake was documented. |
| Administration of anti-interleukin-6 biological agents showed remarkable reverting activity towards the downregulation of different CYP isoenzymes (especially of CYP3A4) in patients with chronic inflammatory conditions. |
| A ‘patient-centered’ strategy based not only on the pharmacokinetic features of the victim drugs, but also on the patient’s underlying conditions (i.e., specific inflammatory conditions, magnitude of inflammatory biomarkers over time, eventual administration of anti-inflammatory biological agents) should be carefully implemented for pursuing appropriate decision making on dose adjustment. |