Abstract

Belinostat, a potent pan-inhibitor of histone deacetylase (HDAC) enzymes, is approved in the United States (US) for relapsed/refractory peripheral T-cell lymphoma. In nonclinical studies, bile and feces were identified as the predominant elimination routes (50-70%), with renal excretion accounting for ~30-50%. A Phase 1 human mass balance study was conducted to identify species-dependent variations in belinostat metabolism and elimination. Patients received a single 30-min intravenous (i.v.) infusion of (14)C-labeled belinostat (1500 mg). Venous blood samples and pooled urine and fecal samples were evaluated using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectroscopy for belinostat and metabolite concentrations pre-infusion through 7 days post-infusion. Total radioactivity was determined using liquid scintillation counting. Continued treatment with nonradiolabled belinostat (1000 mg/m(2) on Days 1-5 every 21 days) was permitted. Belinostat was extensively metabolized and mostly cleared from plasma within 8 h (N = 6), indicating that metabolism is the primary route of elimination. Systemic exposure for the 5 major metabolites was >20% of parent, with belinostat glucuronide the predominant metabolite. Mean recovery of radioactive belinostat was 94.5% ± 4.0%, with the majority excreted within 48 and 96 h in urine and feces, respectively. Renal elimination was the principal excretion route (mean 84.8% ± 9.8% of total dose); fecal excretion accounted for 9.7% ± 6.5%. Belinostat was well tolerated, with mostly mild to moderate adverse events and no treatment-related severe/serious events. Mass balance was achieved (~95% mean recovery), with metabolism identified as the primary route of elimination. Radioactivity was predominantly excreted renally as belinostat metabolites.

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