Selection of Priority Natural Products for Evaluation as Potential Precipitants of Natural Product-Drug Interactions: A NaPDI Center Recommended Approach.

Drug Metab Dispos

Center of Excellence for Natural Product Drug Interaction Research, Spokane, Washington (Y.S.L., J.D.U., A.E.R., D.D.S., J.S.M., M.F.P.); Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Washington State University, Spokane, Washington (E.J.J., V.G.-P., D.-D.T., M.F.P.); Department of Pharmaceutics (Y.S.L., J.D.U., D.D.S., J.S.M.) and Department of Medicinal Chemistry (A.E.R.), University of Washington, Seattle, Washington; and Department of Population Sciences, City of Hope, Duarte, California (J.S.M.)

Published: July 2018

Pharmacokinetic interactions between natural products (NPs) and conventional medications (prescription and nonprescription) are a longstanding but understudied problem in contemporary pharmacotherapy. Consequently, there are no established methods for selecting and prioritizing commercially available NPs to evaluate as precipitants of NP-drug interactions (NPDIs). As such, NPDI discovery remains largely a retrospective, bedside-to-bench process. This Recommended Approach, developed by the Center of Excellence for Natural Product Drug Interaction Research (NaPDI Center), describes a systematic method for selecting NPs to evaluate as precipitants of potential clinically significant pharmacokinetic NPDIs. Guided information-gathering tools were used to score, rank, and triage NPs from an initial list of 47 candidates. Triaging was based on the presence and/or absence of an NPDI identified in a clinical study (≥20% or <20% change in the object drug area under the concentration vs. time curve, respectively), as well as mechanistic and descriptive in vitro and clinical data. A qualitative decision-making tool, termed the fulcrum model, was developed and applied to 11 high-priority NPs for rigorous study of NPDI risk. Application of this approach produced a final list of five high-priority NPs, four of which are currently under investigation by the NaPDI Center.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6003438PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1124/dmd.118.081273DOI Listing

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