Identification and Quantification of Novel Major Metabolites of the Steroidal Aromatase Inhibitor, Exemestane.

Drug Metab Dispos

Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Washington State University, Spokane, Washington (S.L., G.C., Z.X., P.L.); Department of Medicine, Penn State University College of Medicine, Hershey, Pennsylvania (C.I.T., C.C.B.); and Alkali Soil Natural Environmental Science Center, Northeast Forestry University, Harbin, Heilongjiang, China (S.L.)

Published: December 2018

Exemestane (EXE) is an aromatase inhibitor used for the prevention and treatment of estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer. Although the known major metabolic pathway for EXE is reduction to form the active 17-dihydro-EXE (17-DHE) and subsequent glucuronidation to 17-hydroxy-EXE-17-O--D-glucuronide (17-DHE-Gluc), previous studies have suggested that other major metabolites exist for exemestane. In the present study, a liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) approach was used to acquire accurate mass data in MS mode, in which precursor ion and fragment ion data were obtained simultaneously to screen novel phase II EXE metabolites in urine specimens from women taking EXE. Two major metabolites predicted to be cysteine conjugates of EXE and 17-DHE by elemental composition were identified. The structures of the two metabolites were confirmed to be 6-methylcysteinylandrosta-1,4-diene-3,17-dione (6-EXE-cys) and 6-methylcysteinylandrosta-1,4-diene-17-hydroxy-3-one (6-17-DHE-cys) after comparison with their chemically synthesized counterparts. Both underwent biosynthesis in vitro in three stepwise enzymatic reactions, with the first involving glutathione conjugation. The cysteine conjugates of EXE and 17-DHE were subsequently quantified by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry in the urine and matched plasma samples of 132 subjects taking EXE. The combined 6-EXE-cys plus 6-17-DHE-cys made up 77% of total EXE metabolites in urine (vs. 1.7%, 0.14%, and 21% for EXE, 17-DHE, and 17-DHE-Gluc, respectively) and 35% in plasma (vs. 17%, 12%, and 36% for EXE, 17-DHE, and 17-DHE-Gluc, respectively). Therefore, cysteine conjugates of EXE and 17-DHE appear to be major metabolites of EXE in both urine and plasma.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7333658PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1124/dmd.118.081166DOI Listing

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August 2022

Pharmaceutical Sciences, Washington State University College of Pharmacy, United States

Exemestane (EXE) is an aromatase inhibitor used to treat hormone-dependent breast cancer. EXE is extensively metabolized, with unchanged EXE and its active metabolite 17-dihydroexemestane (17-DHE) accounting for 17 and 12%, respectively, of total plasma EXE The major circulating EXE metabolites are the cysteine conjugates of EXE and 17-DHE, and the 17-DHE glucuronide, which together account for 70% of total plasma EXE The goal of the present study was to examine the inhibition potential of major metabolites of EXE through inhibition assays using aromatase-overexpressing cells and pooled ovarian tissues. Estrone formation was used as a measure of aromatase activity and was detected and quantified using UPLC-MS.

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