艾滋病、肝炎和其他抗病毒药物临床药理学国际研讨会摘要。

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2024-10-10 DOI:10.1111/bcp.16298
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引用次数: 0

摘要

19P-糖蛋白、乳腺癌抗性蛋白和CYP3A4调节剂对HIV感染者体内TLR-7激动剂维沙托莫德药代动力学的影响Yanan Zheng1, Mary Wire1、Buyun Chen1, Christiaan de Vries1, Olayemi Oisyemi2, Kimberly Cruz3, Howard Hassman4, Juan Rondon5, Daina Lim1, Steve West1, Jia Hao1, Yiding Hu1, Yurong Lai1 and Ramesh Palaparthy11Gilead Sciences, Inc.2Triple Research Institute; 3Advanced Pharma CR, LLC; 4CenExel HRI; 5Clinical Pharmacology of Miami, LLC背景:Vesatolimod(VES)是一种Toll样受体7(TLR-7)激动剂,目前正作为一种免疫调节剂接受评估,以增强 "清除-控制 "HIV治愈策略中的抗病毒反应。根据非临床数据,VES 是 P-糖蛋白 (P-gp)、乳腺癌抗性蛋白 (BCRP) 和 CYP3A 的底物。可比司他(COBI;一种P-gp、BCRP和强CYP3A抑制剂)、伏立康唑(VOR;一种强CYP3A抑制剂)和利福布汀(RFB;一种中度CYP3A诱导剂)有可能改变VES的血浆浓度,这些药物可作为抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)或治疗真菌或细菌感染的一部分用于艾滋病病毒感染者(PLWH):NCT05458102是一项开放标签研究,旨在评估P-gp/BCRP/CYP3A4调节剂对稳定接受抗逆转录病毒疗法的病毒学抑制型艾滋病病毒感染者体内VES药代动力学(PK)的影响。在队列 1 中,以下研究药物分三个阶段依次口服给药:第一阶段,VES 2 毫克;第二阶段,COBI 150 毫克,每天一次,共 5 天,第 2 天联合给药 VES 2 毫克;第三阶段,VOR 400 毫克,每天两次,第 1 天和第 2-6 天各 200 毫克,每天两次,第 3 天联合给药 VES 2 毫克。在队列 2 中,以下研究药物分两个阶段依次口服:第 1 阶段,VES 6 毫克;第 2 阶段,RFB 300 毫克,每天一次,共 9 天,第 6 天同时服用 VES 2 毫克。在每次服用 VES 后的 96 小时内采集 VES PK 样本。采用非室分析法估算 VES PK 参数,并采用方差分析法对不同治疗进行比较:在队列 1(N = 15)中,当 VES 与 COBI 联合给药时,中位 Tmax 提前 1.5 小时出现,VES 的几何最小二乘法平均值 (GLSM) AUC、Cmax 和 t1/2 分别增加了 4.3 倍、7.5 倍和 1.2 倍。在队列 2(N = 2)中,当 VES 与 RFB 联合用药时,VES 的中位 Tmax 提前了 3.85 小时,VES 的 AUC 和 Cmax 分别增加了 26 倍和 98 倍以及 2.6 倍和 10 倍。在一名两个疗程均可评估 VES t1/2 的受试者中,当 VES 与 RFB 联合用药时,t1/2 从单用 VES 时的 23.9 小时降至 14.3 小时。非临床研究发现,RFB 是一种 P-gp 和 BCRP 抑制剂,也是 Caco-2 细胞中 VES 外流的强效抑制剂。8 名参与者(47.1%)出现了与药物相关的治疗突发不良事件(TEAEs),主要为 1 级。一名参与者(5.9%)出现了超过 1 级的 TEAE,被认为与 VES + RFB 有关。没有严重的TEAE或死亡病例:与 VES 和 VOR 相比,VES 和 COBI 之间的 PK 相互作用幅度更大,这表明转运体(P-gp 和/或 BCRP)比药物代谢酶(CYP3A)发挥的作用更大,而且这种相互作用主要是系统前的。与 RFB 联合用药会增加 VES 的 PK 暴露,随后的非临床结果表明 RFB 是 P-gp 和 BCRP 抑制剂,这表明 RFB 会抑制这些参与 VES 吸收的外流转运体。
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The effect of P-glycoprotein, breast cancer resistance protein and CYP3A4 modulators on the pharmacokinetics of the TLR-7 agonist vesatolimod in people living with HIV

19

The effect of P-glycoprotein, breast cancer resistance protein and CYP3A4 modulators on the pharmacokinetics of the TLR-7 agonist vesatolimod in people living with HIV

Yanan Zheng1, Mary Wire1, Buyun Chen1, Christiaan de Vries1, Olayemi Oisyemi2, Kimberly Cruz3, Howard Hassman4, Juan Rondon5, Daina Lim1, Steve West1, Jia Hao1, Yiding Hu1, Yurong Lai1 and Ramesh Palaparthy1

1Gilead Sciences, Inc.; 2Triple Research Institute; 3Advanced Pharma CR, LLC; 4CenExel HRI; 5Clinical Pharmacology of Miami, LLC

Background: Vesatolimod (VES) is a Toll-like receptor 7 (TLR-7) agonist being evaluated as an immunomodulator to enhance antiviral responses in the clear-and-control HIV cure strategy. Per nonclinical data, VES is a substrate of P-glycoprotein (P-gp), breast cancer resistance protein (BCRP) and CYP3A. Cobicistat (COBI; a P-gp, BCRP, and strong CYP3A inhibitor), voriconazole (VOR; a strong CYP3A inhibitor) and rifabutin (RFB; a moderate CYP3A inducer) have the potential to alter VES plasma concentrations, and these medications may be administered to people living with HIV (PLWH) as part of antiretroviral therapy (ART) or to treat fungal or bacterial infections.

Materials and methods: NCT05458102 was an open-label study to evaluate the effect of P-gp/BCRP/CYP3A4 modulators on VES pharmacokinetics (PK) in virologically suppressed PLWH on stable ART. In cohort 1, the following study drugs were administered orally in three periods sequentially: period 1, VES 2 mg; period 2, COBI 150 mg once daily for 5 days with VES 2 mg co-administered on day 2; period 3, VOR 400 mg twice daily on day 1 and 200 mg twice daily on days 2–6 with VES 2 mg co-administered on day 3. In cohort 2, the following study drugs were administered orally in two periods sequentially: period 1, VES 6 mg; period 2, RFB 300 mg once daily for 9 days with VES 2 mg co-administered on day 6. VES PK samples were collected over 96 h after each dose of VES. VES PK parameters were estimated using noncompartmental analysis and compared between treatments using an analysis of variance.

Results: In cohort 1 (N = 15), when VES was co-administered with COBI, median Tmax occurred 1.5 h earlier and the geometric least squares mean (GLSM) VES AUC, Cmax, and t1/2 increased 4.3-, 7.5- and 1.2-fold, respectively. When VES was co-administered with VOR, there was no change in median Tmax or in GLSM VES AUCinf, Cmax, and t1/2.

In cohort 2 (N = 2), when VES was co-administered with RFB, median VES Tmax occurred 3.85 h earlier and individual increases in VES AUC and Cmax were 26- and 98-fold and 2.6- and 10-fold, respectively. In one participant with evaluable VES t1/2 for both periods, t1/2 decreased from 23.9 h for VES alone to 14.3 h when VES was co-administered with RFB. Non-clinical investigations identified RFB as a P-gp and BCRP inhibitor and as a potent inhibitor of VES efflux in Caco-2 cells.

Eight participants (47.1%) experienced drug-related treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs), which were mainly grade 1. One participant (5.9%) experienced TEAEs greater than grade 1 which were considered related to VES + RFB. There were no serious TEAEs or deaths.

Conclusions: The larger magnitude of PK interaction between VES and COBI compared with VES and VOR suggests that transporters (P-gp and/or BCRP) play a greater role than drug-metabolizing enzymes (CYP3A) and that the interaction is predominantly pre-systemic. The increase in VES PK exposure when co-administered with RFB and the subsequent nonclinical results that identified RFB as a P-gp and BCRP inhibitor suggest that RFB inhibits these efflux transporters involved in VES absorption.

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