Physiologically Based Biopharmaceutics Model (PBBM) of Minimally Absorbed Locally Acting Drugs in the Gastrointestinal Tract-Case Study: Tenapanor.

GI tract IBS NHE3 PBBM biopharmaceutics food effect locally acting drugs minimally absorbed tenapanor

Journal

Pharmaceutics
ISSN: 1999-4923
Titre abrégé: Pharmaceutics
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101534003

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
04 Dec 2023
Historique:
received: 11 10 2023
revised: 23 11 2023
accepted: 30 11 2023
medline: 23 12 2023
pubmed: 23 12 2023
entrez: 23 12 2023
Statut: epublish

Résumé

A physiologically based biopharmaceutics model (PBBM) was developed to predict stool and urine sodium content in response to tenapanor administration in healthy subjects. Tenapanor is a minimally absorbed small molecule that inhibits the sodium/hydrogen isoform 3 exchanger (NHE3). It is used to treat irritable bowel syndrome with constipation (IBS-C). Its mode of action in the gastrointestinal tract reduces the uptake of sodium, resulting in an increase in water secretion in the intestinal lumen and accelerating intestinal transit time. The strategy employed was to perform drug-drug interaction (DDI) modelling between sodium and tenapanor, with sodium as the "victim" administered as part of daily food intake and tenapanor as the "perpetrator" altering sodium absorption. Food effect was modelled, including meal-induced NHE3 activity using sodium as an inducer by normalising the induction kinetics of butyrate to sodium equivalents. The presented model successfully predicted both urine and stool sodium content in response to tenapanor dosed in healthy subjects (within 1.25-fold error) and provided insight into the clinical observations of tenapanor dosing time relative to meal ingestion. The PBBM model was applied retrospectively to assess the impact of different forms of tenapanor (free base vs. HCl salt) on its pharmacodynamic (PD) effect. The developed modelling strategy can be effectively adopted to increase confidence in using PBBM models for the prediction of the in vivo behaviour of minimally absorbed, locally acting drugs in the gastrointestinal tract, when other approaches (e.g., biomarkers or PD data) are not available.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38140067
pii: pharmaceutics15122726
doi: 10.3390/pharmaceutics15122726
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Auteurs

Konstantinos Stamatopoulos (K)

Biopharmaceutics, DPD, MDS, GSK, Ware SG12 0DP, UK.

Nena Mistry (N)

Biopharmaceutics, DPD, MDS, GSK, Ware SG12 0DP, UK.

Nikoletta Fotaki (N)

Centre for Therapeutic Innovation, Department of Life Sciences, University of Bath, Claverton Down, Bath BA2 7AY, UK.

David B Turner (DB)

Certara UK Limited, Simcyp Division, Sheffield S1 2BJ, UK.

Classifications MeSH