Effects of Urotensin II Receptor Antagonist, GSK1440115, in Asthma.

Front Pharmacol

Virtual Proof of Concept Discovery Performance Unit GlaxoSmithKline, King of Prussia, PA, USA.

Published: May 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Urotensin II (U-II) is thought to play a role in lung function, and researchers tested U-T receptor antagonist GSK1440115 as a potential asthma treatment.
  • A Phase I trial showed GSK1440115 was safe and well-tolerated in healthy adults, while a Phase Ib trial indicated asthmatic patients achieved necessary drug concentrations but did not show improvement in breathing tests.
  • The study concluded that while the drug is safe, it failed to provide bronchodilation or protect against bronchospasm in asthmatics, suggesting limited effectiveness as an asthma treatment.

Article Abstract

Background: Urotensin II (U-II) is highly expressed in the human lung and has been implicated in regulating respiratory physiology in preclinical studies. Our objective was to test antagonism of the urotensin (UT) receptor by GSK1440115, a novel, competitive, and selective inhibitor of the UT receptor, as a therapeutic strategy for the treatment of asthma.

Methods: Safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics (PK) of single doses of GSK1440115 (1-750 mg) were assessed in a Phase I, placebo controlled study in 70 healthy subjects. In a Phase Ib study, 12 asthmatic patients were randomized into a two-period, single-blind crossover study and treated with single doses of 750 mg GSK1440115 or placebo and given a methacholine challenge.

Results: Administration of GSK1440115 was safe and well-tolerated in healthy subjects and asthmatic patients. In both studies, there was a high degree of variability in the observed PK following oral dosing with GSK1440115 at all doses. There was a marked food effect in healthy subjects at the 50 mg dose. In the presence of food at the 750 mg dose, the time to maximal concentration was between 2 and 6 h and the terminal half-life was short at approximately 2 h. All asthmatic patients maintained greater than the predicted concentration levels necessary to achieve predicted 96% receptor occupancy for ≥3 h (between 4 and 7 h post-dose). There were no apparent trends or relationships between the systemic plasma exposure of GSK1440115 and pharmacodynamic endpoints, PC20 after methacholine challenge and FEV1, in asthmatics.

Conclusion: While GSK1440115 was safe and well-tolerated, it did not induce bronchodilation in asthmatics, or protect against methacholine-induced bronchospasm, suggesting that acute UT antagonism is not likely to provide benefit as an acute bronchodilator in this patient population.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3638148PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2013.00054DOI Listing

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