Carboxylesterase 1-Based Drug-Drug Interaction Potential of Remimazolam: In-Vitro Studies and Literature Review

被引:0
|
作者
Petersen, Karl-Uwe [1 ]
Schmalix, Wolfgang [1 ]
Pesic, Marija [1 ]
Stoehr, Thomas [1 ]
机构
[1] Rhein Westfal TH Aachen, Dept Pharmacol, Aachen, Germany
关键词
Carboxylesterase; 1; drug-drug interactions; remimazolam; CES1; inhibition; systematic review; CLOPIDOGREL-STATIN INTERACTION; CONVERTING ENZYME-INHIBITORS; PREDICTION; PRODRUG; BINDING; BIOACTIVATION; METABOLISM; ACTIVATION;
D O I
10.2174/0113892002308233240801104910
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Background: The ultra-short-acting benzodiazepine remimazolam, approved for procedural sedation and general anesthesia, is inactivated by carboxylesterase 1 (CES1). Objective Remimazolam<acute accent>s involvement in CES1-mediated drug-drug interactions (DDIs) was investigated. Methods: Possible interactions of remimazolam were studied in co-exposure experiments with eleven different drugs. Further, substrates and inhibitors of CES1, identified in the literature, were evaluated for possible in-vivo inhibition using pharmacokinetic and Ki or IC50 values. Compounds with only one published inhibitory concentration and CES1 substrates lacking inhibition data were assigned conservative Ki values. Results In human liver homogenates and/or blood cells, remimazolam showed no significant inhibition of esmolol and landiolol metabolism, which, in turn, at up to 98 and 169 mu M, respectively, did not inhibit remimazolam hydrolysis by human liver homogenates. In human liver S9 fractions, IC50 values ranged from 0.69 mu M (simvastatin) and 57 mu M (diltiazem) to > 100 mu M (atorvastatin) and, for the remaining test items (bupropion, carvedilol, nelfinavir, nitrendipine, and telmisartan), they ranged from 126 to 658 mu M. Remifentanil was ineffective even at 1250 mu M. Guidance-conforming evaluation revealed no relevant drug-drug interactions with remimazolam via CES1. The algorithm-based predictions were consistent with human study data. Among CES1 inhibitors and substrates identified in the literature, only dapsone and rufinamide were found to be possible in-vivo inhibitors of remimazolam metabolism. Conclusion Data and analyses suggest a very low potential of remimazolam for pharmacokinetic DDIs mediated by CES1. The theoretical approach and compiled data are not specific to remimazolam and, hence, applicable in the evaluation of other CES1 substrates.
引用
收藏
页码:431 / 445
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Drug-Drug Interaction Potential of Remimazolam: CYP 450, Transporters, and Protein Binding
    Petersen, Karl-Uwe
    Schmalix, Wolfgang
    Pesic, Marija
    Stoehr, Thomas
    CURRENT DRUG METABOLISM, 2024, 25 (04) : 266 - 275
  • [2] Impact of genetic polymorphisms and drug-drug interactions mediated by carboxylesterase 1 on remimazolam deactivation
    Wang, Zhuo
    Mccalla, Zachary
    Lin, Li
    Tornichio, Dominic
    Agyemang, Yaw
    Bastulli, John A.
    Zhang, Xiaochun Susan
    Zhu, Hao-Jie
    Wang, Xinwen
    DRUG METABOLISM AND DISPOSITION, 2025, 53 (01)
  • [3] Maraviroc:: in vitro assessment of drug-drug interaction potential
    Hyland, Ruth
    Dickins, Maurice
    Collins, Claire
    Jones, Hannah
    Jones, Barry
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY, 2008, 66 (04) : 498 - 507
  • [4] Prediction and In Vitro Evaluation of Selected Protease Inhibitor Antiviral Drugs as Inhibitors of Carboxylesterase 1: A Potential Source of Drug-Drug Interactions
    Rhoades, Jenna A.
    Peterson, Yuri K.
    Zhu, Hao-Jie
    Appel, David I.
    Peloquin, Charles A.
    Markowitz, John S.
    PHARMACEUTICAL RESEARCH, 2012, 29 (04) : 972 - 982
  • [5] Prediction and In Vitro Evaluation of Selected Protease Inhibitor Antiviral Drugs as Inhibitors of Carboxylesterase 1: A Potential Source of Drug-Drug Interactions
    Jenna A. Rhoades
    Yuri K. Peterson
    Hao-Jie Zhu
    David I. Appel
    Charles A. Peloquin
    John S. Markowitz
    Pharmaceutical Research, 2012, 29 : 972 - 982
  • [6] In vitro and physiologically-based pharmacokinetic based assessment of drug-drug interaction potential of canagliflozin
    Mamidi, Rao N. V. S.
    Dallas, Shannon
    Sensenhauser, Carlo
    Lim, Heng Keang
    Scheers, Ellen
    Verboven, Peter
    Cuyckens, Filip
    Leclercq, Laurent
    Evans, David C.
    Kelley, Michael F.
    Johnson, Mark D.
    Snoeys, Jan
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY, 2017, 83 (05) : 1082 - 1096
  • [7] Positioning Enzyme- and Transporter-Based Precipitant Drug-Drug Interaction Studies in Drug Design
    Schroeter, Thomas
    Lapham, Kimberly
    Varma, Manthena V. S.
    Obach, R. Scott
    JOURNAL OF MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY, 2025, 68 (02) : 1021 - 1032
  • [8] Drug-Drug Interaction Potential of Marketed Oncology Drugs: In Vitro Assessment of Time-Dependent Cytochrome P450 Inhibition, Reactive Metabolite Formation and Drug-Drug Interaction Prediction
    Kenny, Jane R.
    Mukadam, Sophie
    Zhang, Chenghong
    Tay, Suzanne
    Collins, Carol
    Galetin, Aleksandra
    Khojasteh, S. Cyrus
    PHARMACEUTICAL RESEARCH, 2012, 29 (07) : 1960 - 1976
  • [9] Methadone Metabolism and Drug-Drug Interactions: In Vitro and In Vivo Literature Review
    Volpe, Donna A.
    Xu, Yun
    Sahajwalla, Chandrahas G.
    Younis, Islam R.
    Patel, Vikram
    JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES, 2018, 107 (12) : 2983 - 2991
  • [10] Deep learning for drug-drug interaction extraction from the literature: a review
    Zhang, Tianlin
    Leng, Jiaxu
    Liu, Ying
    BRIEFINGS IN BIOINFORMATICS, 2020, 21 (05) : 1609 - 1627