Understanding adefovir pharmacokinetics as a component of a transporter phenotyping cocktail

Author:

Dong Qian,Chen Chunli,Taubert Max,Bilal Muhammad,Kinzig Martina,Sörgel Fritz,Scherf-Clavel Oliver,Fuhr Uwe,Dokos Charalambos

Abstract

Abstract Purpose Adefovir (as dipivoxil) was selected as a probe drug in a previous transporter cocktail phenotyping study to assess renal organic anion transporter 1 (OAT1), with renal clearance (CLR) as the primary parameter describing renal elimination. An approximately 20% higher systemic exposure of adefovir was observed when combined with other cocktail components (metformin, sitagliptin, pitavastatin, and digoxin) compared to sole administration. The present evaluation applied a population pharmacokinetic (popPK) modeling approach to describe adefovir pharmacokinetics as a cocktail component in more detail. Methods Data from 24 healthy subjects were reanalyzed. After establishing a base model, covariate effects, including the impact of co-administered drugs, were assessed using forward inclusion then backward elimination. Results A one-compartment model with first-order absorption (including lag time) and a combination of nonlinear renal and linear nonrenal elimination best described the data. A significantly higher apparent bioavailability (73.6% vs. 59.0%) and a lower apparent absorption rate constant (2.29 h−1 vs. 5.18 h−1) were identified in the combined period compared to the sole administration period, while no difference was seen in renal elimination. The population estimate for the Michaelis-Menten constant (Km) of the nonlinear renal elimination was 170 nmol/L, exceeding the observed range of adefovir plasma maximum concentration, while the maximum rate (Vmax) of nonlinear renal elimination was 2.40 µmol/h at the median absolute estimated glomerular filtration rate of 105 mL/min. Conclusion The popPK modeling approach indicated that the co-administration primarily affected the apparent absorption and/or prodrug conversion of adefovir dipivoxil, resulting in the minor drug-drug interaction observed for adefovir as a victim. However, renal elimination remained unaffected. The high Km value suggests that assessing renal OAT1 activity by CLR has no relevant misspecification error with the cocktail doses used.

Funder

China Scholarship Council

the International Postdoctoral Exchange Fellowship Program from the Office of China Postdoctoral Council

the National Natural Science Foundation of Heilongjiang Province

the 2022 ESI International High Impact Research Article Cooperation Program

the Higher Education Commission of Pakistan provided financial support in the form of a Ph.D. scholarship through the German Academic Exchange Service

Universitätsklinikum Köln

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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