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Title: Brain accumulation of osimertinib and its active metabolite AZ5104 is restricted by ABCB1 (P-glycoprotein) and ABCG2 (breast cancer resistance protein). Author: van Hoppe S, Jamalpoor A, Rood JJM, Wagenaar E, Sparidans RW, Beijnen JH, Schinkel AH. Journal: Pharmacol Res; 2019 Aug; 146():104297. PubMed ID: 31175939. Abstract: Osimertinib is an irreversible EGFR inhibitor registered for advanced NSCLC patients whose tumors harbor recurrent somatic activating mutations in EGFR (EGFRm+) or the frequently occurring EGFR-T790M resistance mutation. Using in vitro transport assays and appropriate knockout and transgenic mouse models, we investigated whether the multidrug efflux transporters ABCB1 and ABCG2 transport osimertinib and whether they influence the oral availability and brain accumulation of osimertinib and its most active metabolite, AZ5104. In vitro, human ABCB1 and mouse Abcg2 modestly transported osimertinib. In mice, Abcb1a/1b, with a minor contribution of Abcg2, markedly limited the brain accumulation of osimertinib and AZ5104. However, no effect of the ABC transporters was seen on osimertinib oral availability. In spite of up to 6-fold higher brain accumulation, we observed no acute toxicity signs of oral osimertinib in Abcb1a/1b;Abcg2 knockout mice. Interestingly, even in wild-type mice the intrinsic brain penetration of osimertinib was already relatively high, which may help to explain the documented partial efficacy of this drug against brain metastases. No substantial effects of mouse Cyp3a knockout or transgenic human CYP3A4 overexpression on oral osimertinib pharmacokinetics were observed, presumably due to a dominant role of mouse Cyp2d enzymes in osimertinib metabolism. Our results suggest that pharmacological inhibition of ABCB1 and ABCG2 during osimertinib therapy might potentially be considered to further benefit patients with brain (micro-)metastases positioned behind an intact blood-brain barrier, or with substantial expression of these transporters in the tumor cells, without invoking a high toxicity risk.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]