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Application of Pharmacokinetic-Pharmacodynamic Modeling to Inform Translation of In Vitro NaV1.7 Inhibition to In Vivo Pharmacological Response in Non-human Primate
被引:2
作者:
Ballard, Jeanine E.
[1
]
Pall, Parul
[2
]
Vardigan, Joshua
[2
]
Zhao, Fuqiang
[3
]
Holahan, Marie A.
[3
]
Kraus, Richard
[4
]
Li, Yuxing
[4
]
Henze, Darrell
[5
]
Houghton, Andrea
[5
]
Burgey, Christopher S.
[6
]
Gibson, Christopher
[1
]
机构:
[1] Merck & Co Inc, Pharmacokinet Pharmacodynam & Drug Metab, West Point, PA 19486 USA
[2] Merck & Co Inc, Vivo Neuropharmacol, West Point, PA USA
[3] Merck & Co Inc, MR CT US & Opt Imaging, West Point, PA USA
[4] Merck & Co Inc, Neuronal Signaling, West Point, PA USA
[5] Merck & Co Inc, Quantitat Biosci, West Point, PA USA
[6] Merck & Co Inc, Discovery Chem, West Point, PA USA
关键词:
fMRI;
NaV1;
7;
nociception;
olfaction;
PK-PD;
GLUCOSE-TRANSPORTER GLUT1;
PAIN;
NA(V)1.7;
MUTATIONS;
POTENCY;
OCCLUDIN;
D O I:
10.1007/s11095-020-02914-9
中图分类号:
O6 [化学];
学科分类号:
0703 ;
摘要:
PurposeThis work describes a staged approach to the application of pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic (PK-PD) modeling in the voltage-gated sodium ion channel (NaV1.7) inhibitor drug discovery effort to address strategic questions regarding in vitro to in vivo translation of target modulation.MethodsPK-PD analysis was applied to data from a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) technique to non-invasively measure treatment mediated inhibition of olfaction signaling in non-human primates (NHPs). Initial exposure-response was evaluated using single time point data pooled across 27 compounds to inform on in vitro to in vivo correlation (IVIVC). More robust effect compartment PK-PD modeling was conducted for a subset of 10 compounds with additional PD and PK data to characterize hysteresis.ResultsThe pooled compound exposure-response facilitated an early exploration of IVIVC with a limited dataset for each individual compound, and it suggested a 2.4-fold in vitro to in vivo scaling factor for the NaV1.7 target. Accounting for hysteresis with an effect compartment PK-PD model as compounds advanced towards preclinical development provided a more robust determination of in vivo potency values, which resulted in a statistically significant positive IVIVC with a slope of 1.0570.210, R-squared of 0.7831, and p value of 0.006. Subsequent simulations with the PK-PD model informed the design of anti-nociception efficacy studies in NHPs.Conclusions A staged approach to PK-PD modeling and simulation enabled integration of in vitro NaV1.7 potency, plasma protein binding, and pharmacokinetics to describe the exposure-response profile and inform future study design as the NaV1.7 inhibitor effort progressed through drug discovery.
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页数:15
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