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Model-Based Analysis of Biopharmaceutic Experiments To Improve Mechanistic Oral Absorption Modeling: An Integrated in Vitro in Vivo Extrapolation Perspective Using Ketoconazole as a Model Drug.
Mol Pharm. 2017 12 04; 14(12):4305-4320.MP

Abstract

Mechanistic modeling of in vitro data generated from metabolic enzyme systems (viz., liver microsomes, hepatocytes, rCYP enzymes, etc.) facilitates in vitro-in vivo extrapolation (IVIV_E) of metabolic clearance which plays a key role in the successful prediction of clearance in vivo within physiologically-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling. A similar concept can be applied to solubility and dissolution experiments whereby mechanistic modeling can be used to estimate intrinsic parameters required for mechanistic oral absorption simulation in vivo. However, this approach has not widely been applied within an integrated workflow. We present a stepwise modeling approach where relevant biopharmaceutics parameters for ketoconazole (KTZ) are determined and/or confirmed from the modeling of in vitro experiments before being directly used within a PBPK model. Modeling was applied to various in vitro experiments, namely: (a) aqueous solubility profiles to determine intrinsic solubility, salt limiting solubility factors and to verify pKa; (b) biorelevant solubility measurements to estimate bile-micelle partition coefficients; (c) fasted state simulated gastric fluid (FaSSGF) dissolution for formulation disintegration profiling; and (d) transfer experiments to estimate supersaturation and precipitation parameters. These parameters were then used within a PBPK model to predict the dissolved and total (i.e., including the precipitated fraction) concentrations of KTZ in the duodenum of a virtual population and compared against observed clinical data. The developed model well characterized the intraluminal dissolution, supersaturation, and precipitation behavior of KTZ. The mean simulated AUC0-t of the total and dissolved concentrations of KTZ were comparable to (within 2-fold of) the corresponding observed profile. Moreover, the developed PBPK model of KTZ successfully described the impact of supersaturation and precipitation on the systemic plasma concentration profiles of KTZ for 200, 300, and 400 mg doses. These results demonstrate that IVIV_E applied to biopharmaceutical experiments can be used to understand and build confidence in the quality of the input parameters and mechanistic models used for mechanistic oral absorption simulations in vivo, thereby improving the prediction performance of PBPK models. Moreover, this approach can inform the selection and design of in vitro experiments, potentially eliminating redundant experiments and thus helping to reduce the cost and time of drug product development.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Simcyp Limited (A Certara Company) , Blades Enterprise Centre, John Street, Sheffield, S2 4SU, United Kingdom.Department of Pharmaceutical Technology, Johann Wolfgang Goethe University , Max-von-Laue-Strasse 9, Frankfurt am Main 60438, Germany.Department of Pharmaceutical Technology, Johann Wolfgang Goethe University , Max-von-Laue-Strasse 9, Frankfurt am Main 60438, Germany.Simcyp Limited (A Certara Company) , Blades Enterprise Centre, John Street, Sheffield, S2 4SU, United Kingdom.Simcyp Limited (A Certara Company) , Blades Enterprise Centre, John Street, Sheffield, S2 4SU, United Kingdom.Simcyp Limited (A Certara Company) , Blades Enterprise Centre, John Street, Sheffield, S2 4SU, United Kingdom.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

28771009

Citation

Pathak, Shriram M., et al. "Model-Based Analysis of Biopharmaceutic Experiments to Improve Mechanistic Oral Absorption Modeling: an Integrated in Vitro in Vivo Extrapolation Perspective Using Ketoconazole as a Model Drug." Molecular Pharmaceutics, vol. 14, no. 12, 2017, pp. 4305-4320.
Pathak SM, Ruff A, Kostewicz ES, et al. Model-Based Analysis of Biopharmaceutic Experiments To Improve Mechanistic Oral Absorption Modeling: An Integrated in Vitro in Vivo Extrapolation Perspective Using Ketoconazole as a Model Drug. Mol Pharm. 2017;14(12):4305-4320.
Pathak, S. M., Ruff, A., Kostewicz, E. S., Patel, N., Turner, D. B., & Jamei, M. (2017). Model-Based Analysis of Biopharmaceutic Experiments To Improve Mechanistic Oral Absorption Modeling: An Integrated in Vitro in Vivo Extrapolation Perspective Using Ketoconazole as a Model Drug. Molecular Pharmaceutics, 14(12), 4305-4320. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.7b00406
Pathak SM, et al. Model-Based Analysis of Biopharmaceutic Experiments to Improve Mechanistic Oral Absorption Modeling: an Integrated in Vitro in Vivo Extrapolation Perspective Using Ketoconazole as a Model Drug. Mol Pharm. 2017 12 4;14(12):4305-4320. PubMed PMID: 28771009.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Model-Based Analysis of Biopharmaceutic Experiments To Improve Mechanistic Oral Absorption Modeling: An Integrated in Vitro in Vivo Extrapolation Perspective Using Ketoconazole as a Model Drug. AU - Pathak,Shriram M, AU - Ruff,Aaron, AU - Kostewicz,Edmund S, AU - Patel,Nikunjkumar, AU - Turner,David B, AU - Jamei,Masoud, Y1 - 2017/08/25/ PY - 2017/8/5/pubmed PY - 2018/7/18/medline PY - 2017/8/4/entrez KW - IVIV_E KW - PBPK KW - biopharmaceutics KW - dissolution modeling KW - ketoconazole KW - pharmacokinetics KW - precipitation SP - 4305 EP - 4320 JF - Molecular pharmaceutics JO - Mol Pharm VL - 14 IS - 12 N2 - Mechanistic modeling of in vitro data generated from metabolic enzyme systems (viz., liver microsomes, hepatocytes, rCYP enzymes, etc.) facilitates in vitro-in vivo extrapolation (IVIV_E) of metabolic clearance which plays a key role in the successful prediction of clearance in vivo within physiologically-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling. A similar concept can be applied to solubility and dissolution experiments whereby mechanistic modeling can be used to estimate intrinsic parameters required for mechanistic oral absorption simulation in vivo. However, this approach has not widely been applied within an integrated workflow. We present a stepwise modeling approach where relevant biopharmaceutics parameters for ketoconazole (KTZ) are determined and/or confirmed from the modeling of in vitro experiments before being directly used within a PBPK model. Modeling was applied to various in vitro experiments, namely: (a) aqueous solubility profiles to determine intrinsic solubility, salt limiting solubility factors and to verify pKa; (b) biorelevant solubility measurements to estimate bile-micelle partition coefficients; (c) fasted state simulated gastric fluid (FaSSGF) dissolution for formulation disintegration profiling; and (d) transfer experiments to estimate supersaturation and precipitation parameters. These parameters were then used within a PBPK model to predict the dissolved and total (i.e., including the precipitated fraction) concentrations of KTZ in the duodenum of a virtual population and compared against observed clinical data. The developed model well characterized the intraluminal dissolution, supersaturation, and precipitation behavior of KTZ. The mean simulated AUC0-t of the total and dissolved concentrations of KTZ were comparable to (within 2-fold of) the corresponding observed profile. Moreover, the developed PBPK model of KTZ successfully described the impact of supersaturation and precipitation on the systemic plasma concentration profiles of KTZ for 200, 300, and 400 mg doses. These results demonstrate that IVIV_E applied to biopharmaceutical experiments can be used to understand and build confidence in the quality of the input parameters and mechanistic models used for mechanistic oral absorption simulations in vivo, thereby improving the prediction performance of PBPK models. Moreover, this approach can inform the selection and design of in vitro experiments, potentially eliminating redundant experiments and thus helping to reduce the cost and time of drug product development. SN - 1543-8392 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/28771009/Model_Based_Analysis_of_Biopharmaceutic_Experiments_To_Improve_Mechanistic_Oral_Absorption_Modeling:_An_Integrated_in_Vitro_in_Vivo_Extrapolation_Perspective_Using_Ketoconazole_as_a_Model_Drug_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -