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Pharmacokinetics of Tropifexor, a Potent Farnesoid X Receptor Agonist, in Participants With Varying Degrees of Hepatic Impairment. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Tropifexor is a medication that targets the farnesoid X receptor and shows consistent absorption rates without major re-circulation in the body.
  • An open-label study found that its pharmacokinetics and safety remain comparable between individuals with hepatic impairment and those with normal liver function after a 200 µg dose.
  • The drug is highly protein-bound and displays a slight increase in unbound exposure in patients with moderate to severe liver impairment, suggesting it can potentially be used in severe liver disease without needing dosage adjustments.

Article Abstract

Tropifexor, a non-bile acid farnesoid X receptor (FXR) agonist, has dose-proportional pharmacokinetics and no obvious major enterohepatic circulation. This open-label study investigated the effect of hepatic impairment (HI), as determined by Child-Pugh grade, on tropifexor's pharmacokinetics, safety, and tolerability following a 200-μg dose in the fasted state. Blood samples were collected through 168 hours after dosing for quantification and plasma protein-binding determination. Total tropifexor exposure was comparable across participants with HI vs those with normal hepatic function. Tropifexor was highly protein bound (>99%) in human plasma across participants of all groups. The average unbound fractions (percentage free) were 0.14% in participants with normal hepatic function and mild HI, which increased to 0.17% and 0.24% in participants with moderate and severe HI, respectively. Similar unbound drug exposure was noted in participants with mild HI and normal hepatic function. Participants with moderate HI (N = 8) had a 1.6-fold increase in unbound exposure (area under the plasma concentration-time curve from time 0 to infinity [AUC ]) and a 1.3-fold increase in maximal exposure (C ) vs those with normal hepatic function (geometric mean ratio: AUC , 1.64 [90%CI, 1.25-2.16]; C , 1.30 [90%CI, 0.96-1.76]). Participants with severe HI (N = 8) had a 1.6-fold increase in AUC (1.61 [90%CI, 1.04-2.49]) and comparable C (1.02 [90%CI, 0.60-1.72]) compared to participants with normal hepatic function. Tropifexor was well tolerated. The relative insensitivity of tropifexor to HI offers the potential to treat patients with severe liver disease without dose adjustment.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jcph.1996DOI Listing

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