Abstract

Hepatocytes provide an integrated model to study drug metabolism and disposition. As a result of a loss of polarity or a significant decrease in the expression of enzymes and transporters, suspended and sandwich-cultured hepatocytes have limitations in determining hepatocellular drug concentrations. Underprediction of the extent of glucuronidation is also a concern for these hepatocyte models. Faldaprevir is a hepatitis C virus protease inhibitor in late-stage development that has demonstrated significant liver enrichment in in vivo rat models based on quantitative whole-body autoradiography (QWBA) and liver-to-plasma area under-the-curve ratio. In bile duct cannulated rats, the primary biliary metabolite was a glucuronide. Owing to ethical concerns, it is difficult to assess liver enrichment in humans, and a lack of in vitro and in vivo correlation of glucuronidation has been reported. The current study was conducted to verify whether a hepatocyte model, rat HepatoPac, could overcome some of these limitations and provide validity for follow-up studies with human HepatoPac. With rat HepatoPac, liver enrichment values averaged 34-fold and were consistent with rat QWBA (26.8-fold) and in vivo data (42-fold). In contrast, liver enrichment in suspended hepatocytes was only 2.8-fold. Furthermore, the extent of faldaprevir glucuronidation in HepatoPac studies was in agreement with in vivo results, with glucuronidation as the major pathway (96%). Suspended rat hepatocytes did not generate the glucuronide or two key hydroxylated metabolites that were observed in vivo. Overall, our studies suggest that HepatoPac is a promising in vitro model to predict in vivo liver enrichment and metabolism, especially for glucuronidation, and has demonstrated superiority over suspended hepatocytes.

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