4.6 Article

Application of Model Informed Precision Dosing to Address the Impact of Pregnancy Stage and CYP2D6 Phenotype on Foetal Morphine Exposure

Journal

AAPS JOURNAL
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1208/s12248-020-00541-1

Keywords

codeine; model informed precision dosing; morphine; physiologically based pharmacokinetics

Funding

  1. Cancer Council South Australia
  2. National Breast Cancer Foundation

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Guidance on the impact of codeine and its metabolites on fetal development is limited by small studies and conflicting findings. Physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling was used to study the effect of gestational stage and maternal CYP2D6 phenotype on fetal morphine exposure after codeine administration. Results show that maternal CYP2D6 phenotype significantly influences fetal morphine exposure, with the greatest risk during the first trimester of pregnancy, especially in CYP2D6 UM phenotype mothers.
Guidance regarding the effect of codeine and its metabolites on foetal development is limited by small studies and inconsistent findings. The primary objective was to use physiologically based pharmacokinetic modelling to investigate the impact of gestational stage and maternal CYP2D6 phenotype on foetal morphine exposure following codeine administration. Full body physiologically based pharmacokinetic models were developed and verified for codeine and morphine using Simcyp (version 19.1). The impact of gestational age and maternal CYP2D6 phenotype on foetal and maternal morphine and codeine exposure following oral codeine administration was modelled in a cohort of 250 pregnant females and foetuses at gestational weeks 0 (mothers only), 6, 12, 24 and 36. Consistent with the known effect on codeine metabolism, a clinically meaningful (>1.65-fold) increase in foetal morphine AUC was observed in the CYP2D6 UM phenotype cohort compared to the CYP2D6 EM and PM phenotype cohorts. The mean (95% CI) foetal morphine AUC in the CYP2D6 UM cohort of 0.988 (0.902 to 1.073) ng/mL.h was 1.8-fold higher than the CYP2D6 EM cohort of 0.546 (0.492 to 0.600) ng/mL.h (p<0.001). Despite a 2.8-fold increase in maternal CYP2D6 protein abundance between gestational weeks 6 and 36, the mean foetal morphine AUC in the CYP2D6 EM and UM phenotype cohorts reduced by 1.55- and 1.75-fold, respectively, over this period. Maternal CYP2D6 phenotype is a significant determinant of foetal morphine AUC. Simulations suggest that the greatest risk with respect to foetal morphine exposure is during the first trimester of pregnancy, particularly in CYP2D6 UM phenotype mothers.

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