This study focused on exploring various in vitro to in vivo extrapolation (IVIVE) approaches with the primary goal of improving human hepatic clearance (CL) prediction for OATP substrates. To that effect, the impact of albumin-mediated uptake in human hepatocytes was investigated. In vitro hepatic uptake assay using suspended human hepatocytes was performed with 16 selected OATP substrates to determine the uptake CL in the absence and presence of 4% BSA and unbound hepatocyte to media partition coefficient (Kp). Substantial enhancement of the unbound uptake CL (PS) was observed in the presence of 4% BSA, demonstrating "albumin-mediated" uptake. Prediction of human hepatic CL was performed using two non-traditional IVIVE approaches: initial uptake CL (PS) and intrinsic metabolic CL (CL) corrected by Kp based on extended clearance concept. Compared to traditional IVIVE using CL only, the two tested IVIVE approaches significantly improved the prediction of human hepatic CL. Particularly, direct extrapolation from PS showed the most robust correlation with in vivo human hepatic CL for all 16 compounds with bias of 1.9-2.0 for two lots of human hepatocytes, respectively. In addition, PS and Kp were also determined in suspended cynomolgus monkey hepatocytes. Prediction of monkey hepatic CL was improved by both approaches, although with more bias compared to human. These results suggested supplementing 4% BSA in human hepatocyte uptake assay provides a useful tool to characterize hepatic uptake CL for OATP substrates, enabling more accurate human CL prediction without any empirical scaling factor (ESF).
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1208/s12248-020-00528-y | DOI Listing |
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