4.6 Article

In vitro validation of an in vivo phenotyping drug cocktail for major drug transporters in humans

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DOI: 10.1016/j.ejps.2023.106459

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Transporter-mediated drug-drug interactions; Membrane transporters; SLC; ABC; Membrane vesicles

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This study investigated the inhibitory effects of individual probe substrates on major transporters in vitro, using a clinically tested cocktail of adefovir, digoxin, metformin, sitagliptin, and pitavastatin. Only sitagliptin showed significant inhibition on several transporters, suggesting a need for dose reduction in the cocktail.
Purpose: Cocktails of transporter probe drugs are used in vivo to assess transporter activity and respective drug -drug interactions. An inhibitory effect of components on transporter activities should be ruled out. Here, for a clinically tested cocktail consisting of adefovir, digoxin, metformin, sitagliptin, and pitavastatin, inhibition of major transporters by individual probe substrates was investigated in vitro. Methods: Transporter transfected HEK293 cells were used in all evaluations. Cell-based assays were applied for uptake by human organic cation transporters 1/2 (hOCT1/2), organic anion transporters 1/3 (hOAT1/3), multidrug and toxin extrusion proteins 1/2K (hMATE1/2K), and organic anion transporter polypeptide 1B1/3 (hOATP1B1/3). For P-glycoprotein (hMDR1) a cell-based efflux assay was used whereas an inside-out vesicle-based assay was used for the bile salt export pump (hBSEP). All assays used standard substrates and established inhibitors (as positive controls). Inhibition experiments using clinically achievable concentrations of potential perpetrators at the relevant transporter expression site were carried out initially. If there was a significant effect, the inhibition potency (Ki) was studied in detail.Results: In the inhibition tests, only sitagliptin had an effect and reduced hOCT1-and hOCT2-mediated met-formin uptake and hMATE2K mediated MPP+ uptake by more than 70%, 80%, and 30%, respectively. The ratios of unbound Cmax (observed clinically) to Ki of sitagliptin were low with 0.009, 0.03, and 0.001 for hOCT1, hOCT2, and hMATE2K, respectively.Conclusion: The inhibition of hOCT2 in vitro by sitagliptin is in agreement with the borderline inhibition of renal metformin elimination observed clinically, supporting a dose reduction of sitagliptin in the cocktail.

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