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Title: Mechanistic In Vitro Studies Indicate that the Clinical Drug-Drug Interaction between Telithromycin and Simvastatin Acid Is Driven by Time-Dependent Inhibition of CYP3A4 with Minimal Effect on OATP1B1. Author: Elsby R, Hare V, Neal H, Outteridge S, Pearson C, Plant K, Gill RU, Butler P, Riley RJ. Journal: Drug Metab Dispos; 2019 Jan; 47(1):1-8. PubMed ID: 30348903. Abstract: A previous attempt to accurately quantify the increased simvastatin acid exposure due to drug-drug interaction (DDI) with coadministered telithromycin, using a mechanistic static model, substantially underpredicted the magnitude of the area under the plasma concentration-time curve ratio (AUCR) based on reversible inhibition of CYP3A4 and organic anion transporting polypeptide 1B1 (OATP1B1). To reconcile this disconnect between predicted and clinically observed AUCR, telithromycin was evaluated as a time-dependent inhibitor of CYP3A4 in vitro, as well as an inhibitor of OATP1B1. Telithromycin inhibited OATP1B1-mediated [3H]-estradiol 17β-d-glucuronide (0.02 µM) transport with a mean IC50 of 12.0 ± 1.45 µM and was determined by IC50 shift and kinetic analyses to be a competitive reversible inhibitor of CYP3A4-mediated midazolam1- hydroxylation with a mean absolute inhibition constant (Ki) value of 3.65 ± 0.531 µM. The 2.83-fold shift in IC50 (10.4-3.68 µM) after a 30-minute metabolic preincubation confirmed telithromycin as a time-dependent inhibitor of CYP3A4; the mean inhibitor concentration that causes half-maximal inactivation of enzyme (KI) and maximal rate of inactivation of enzyme (kinact) values determined for inactivation were 1.05 ± 0.226 µM and 0.02772 ± 0.00272 min-1, respectively. After the integration of an enzyme time-dependent inhibition component into the previous mechanistic static model using the in vitro inhibitory kinetic parameters determined above, the newly predicted simvastatin acid AUCR (10.8 or 5.4) resulting from perturbation of its critical disposition pathways matched the clinically observed AUCR (10.8 or 4.3) after coadministration, or staggered administration, with telithromycin, respectively. These results indicate the time-dependent inhibition of CYP3A4 by telithromycin as the primary driver underlying its clinical DDI with simvastatin acid.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]