4.5 Article

Evaluation of the GastroPlus™ Advanced Compartmental and Transit (ACAT) Model in Early Discovery

Journal

PHARMACEUTICAL RESEARCH
Volume 33, Issue 9, Pages 2126-2139

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s11095-016-1951-z

Keywords

advanced compartmental and transit(ACAT); drug discovery; GastroPlus; oral absorption; physiologically based pharmacokinetics (PBPK)

Funding

  1. NIBR

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The aim of this study was to evaluate the oral exposure predictions obtained early in drug discovery with a generic GastroPlus Advanced Compartmental And Transit (ACAT) model based on the in vivo intravenous blood concentration-time profile, in silico properties (lipophilicity, pKa) and in vitro high-throughput absorption-distribution-metabolism-excretion (ADME) data (as determined by PAMPA, solubility, liver microsomal stability assays). The model was applied to a total of 623 discovery molecules and their oral exposure was predicted in rats and/or dogs. The predictions of C-max, AUC(last) and T-max were compared against the observations. The generic model proved to make predictions of oral C-max, AUC(last) and T-max within 3-fold of the observations for rats in respectively 65%, 68% and 57% of the 537 cases. For dogs, it was respectively 77%, 79% and 85% of the 124 cases. Statistically, the model was most successful at predicting oral exposure of Biopharmaceutical Classification System (BCS) class 1 compounds compared to classes 2 and 3, and was worst at predicting class 4 compounds oral exposure. The generic GastroPlus ACAT model provided reasonable predictions especially for BCS class 1 compounds. For compounds of other classes, the model may be refined by obtaining more information on solubility and permeability in secondary assays. This increases confidence that such a model can be used in discovery projects to understand the parameters limiting absorption and extrapolate predictions across species. Also, when predictions disagree with the observations, the model can be updated to test hypotheses and understand oral absorption.

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