Abstract

CYP3A plays an important role in drug metabolism and, thus, can be a considerable liability for drug-drug interactions. Population pharmacokinetics may be an efficient tool for detecting such drug-drug interactions. Multiple models have been developed for midazolam, the typical probe substrate for CYP3A activity, but no population pharmacokinetic models have been developed for use with inhibition or induction. The objective of the current analysis was to develop a composite parent-metabolite model for midazolam which could adequately describe CYP3A drug-drug interactions. As an exploratory objective, parameters were assessed for potential cut-points which may allow for determination of drug-drug interactions when a baseline profile is not available. The final interaction model adequately described midazolam and 1′-OH midazolam concentrations for constitutive, inhibited, and induced CYP3A activity. The model showed good internal and external validity, both with full profiles and limited sampling (2, 2.5, 3, and 4 h), and the model predicted parameters were congruent with values found in clinical studies. Assessment of potential cut-points for model predicted parameters to assess drug-drug interaction liability with a single profile suggested that midazolam clearance may reasonably be used to detect inhibition (4.82–16.4 L/h), induction (41.8–88.9 L/h), and no modulation (16.4–41.8 L/h), with sensitivities for potent inhibition and induction of 87.9% and 83.3%, respectively, and a specificity of 98.2% for no modulation. Thus, the current model and cut-points could provide efficient and accurate tools for drug-drug liability detection, both during drug development and in the clinic, following prospective validation in healthy volunteers and patient populations.

Highlights

  • Drug-drug interactions (DDIs) are a serious concern for drug developers, physicians, and patients, with the increasing rate of polypharmacy [1,2,3]

  • Multiple models have been developed for midazolam, the typical probe substrate for CYP3A activity, but no population pharmacokinetic models have been developed for use with inhibition or induction

  • In three of the studies, additional treatment arms were present which were not used for model development, but which were used as part of the external validation set, as they consisted of (i) midazolam administered in the presence of a substance which had been thought to potentially induce CYP3A activity, (ii) midazolam administered following withdrawal of a concomitantly administered inducer

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Summary

Introduction

Drug-drug interactions (DDIs) are a serious concern for drug developers, physicians, and patients, with the increasing rate of polypharmacy [1,2,3]. The thresholds are relatively conservative, in order to avoid false negative results and to protect patients. These conservative thresholds result in numerous DDI trials without significant effects [13, 14], which consume time and resources during drug development. This appears to be Journal of Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics (2020) 47:527–542 likely when multiple mechanisms are present (e.g. induction plus inactivation) [15]. Amongst its advantages are the ability to be used with both extensive and sparse sampling, as well as a relatively simple implementation in early clinical development

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