4.5 Article

A drug-drug interaction study with letermovir and acyclovir in healthy participants

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 89, Issue 5, Pages 1690-1694

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/bcp.15648

Keywords

infectious diseases; virology; pharmacokinetics; drug interactions; drug transporters

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Letermovir inhibits OAT3 both in vitro and in vivo, there is a likelihood of drug-drug interaction with acyclovir, a substrate of OAT3. A study was conducted to evaluate the effect of letermovir on acyclovir pharmacokinetics in healthy participants. The results showed no clinically significant interaction between letermovir and acyclovir, indicating no dose adjustment is required for coadministration.
Letermovir inhibits renal tubular organic anion transporter 3 (OAT3) in vitro and is predicted to inhibit OAT3 in vivo. Acyclovir, a substrate for OAT3, is likely to be coadministered with letermovir; therefore, letermovir may increase acyclovir concentrations. A drug-drug interaction study was conducted in healthy participants (N = 16) to assess the effect of letermovir on acyclovir pharmacokinetics. On Day 1, participants received a single oral dose of 400 mg acyclovir; on Days 2-7, participants received oral doses of 480 mg letermovir once daily with a single oral dose of 400 mg acyclovir coadministered on Day 7. Coadministration with letermovir resulted in geometric mean ratios (90% confidence intervals) for acyclovir area under the concentration-time curve from administration to infinity and maximum plasma concentration of 1.02 (0.87-1.20) and 0.82 (0.71-0.93), respectively. No notable safety issues were reported. No clinically significant interaction was observed between letermovir and acyclovir in healthy participants and no dose adjustment is required for coadministration.

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