AI Article Synopsis

  • CYP450 phenotyping measures how well an individual's body processes specific probe drugs to infer activity of CYP enzymes, important for understanding drug metabolism in varying health conditions like obesity or pregnancy.
  • The study used a physiologically based pharmacokinetic approach to determine if plasma clearance of these drugs truly reflects CYP enzyme activity and how much factors like protein binding or blood flow affect this clearance.
  • Results show that while plasma clearance generally responds to changes in CYP activity, it is also significantly influenced by the unbound drug fraction, particularly for drugs that are high in protein binding, limiting the accuracy of using plasma clearance as a sole measure of CYP activity.

Article Abstract

Background And Objective: CYP450 (CYP) phenotyping involves quantifying an individual's plasma clearance of CYP-specific probe drugs, as a proxy for in vivo CYP enzyme activity. It is increasingly applied to study alterations in CYP enzyme activity under various (patho)physiological conditions, such as inflammation, obesity, or pregnancy. The phenotyping approach assumes that changes in plasma clearance of probe drugs are driven by changes in CYP enzyme activity. However, plasma clearance is also influenced by protein binding, blood-to-plasma ratio, and hepatic blood flow, all of which may change under (patho)physiological conditions.

Methods: Using a physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) workflow, we aimed to evaluate whether the plasma clearance of commonly used CYP probe drugs is indeed directly proportional to alterations in CYP enzyme activity (sensitivity), and to what extent alterations in protein binding, blood-to-plasma ratio, and hepatic blood flow observed under (patho)physiological conditions impact plasma clearance (specificity).

Results: Plasma clearance of CYP probe drugs is sensitive to alterations in CYP enzyme activity, since alterations in intrinsic clearance between - 90% and + 150% resulted in near-proportional changes in plasma clearance, except for midazolam in the case of > 50% CYP3A4 induction. However, plasma clearance also changed near-proportionally with alterations in the unbound drug fraction, diminishing probe specificity. This was particularly relevant for high protein-bound probe drugs, as alterations in plasma protein binding resulted in larger relative changes in the unbound drug fraction. Alterations in the blood-to-plasma ratio and hepatic blood flow of ± 50% resulted in plasma clearance changes of less than ± 16%, meaning they limitedly impacted plasma clearance of CYP probe drugs, except for midazolam. In order to correct for the impact of non-metabolic determinants on probe drug plasma clearance, an R script was developed to calculate how much the CYP enzyme activity is actually altered under (patho)physiological conditions, when alterations in the unbound drug fraction, blood-to-plasma ratio, and/or hepatic blood flow also impact probe drug plasma clearance.

Conclusions: As plasma protein binding can change under (patho)physiological conditions, alterations in unbound drug fraction should be accounted for when using CYP probe drug plasma clearance as a proxy for CYP enzyme activity in patient populations. The tool developed in this study can support researchers in determining alterations in CYP enzyme activity in patients with (patho)physiological conditions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11573838PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40262-024-01426-8DOI Listing

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