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1.
Pharm Res ; 34(12): 2498-2516, 2017 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28702798

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To examine if pulmonary P-glycoprotein (P-gp) is functional in an intact lung; impeding the pulmonary absorption and increasing lung retention of P-gp substrates administered into the airways. Using calculated physico-chemical properties alone build a predictive Quantitative Structure-Activity Relationship (QSAR) model distinguishing whether a substrate's pulmonary absorption would be limited by P-gp or not. METHODS: A panel of 18 P-gp substrates were administered into the airways of an isolated perfused mouse lung (IPML) model derived from Mdr1a/Mdr1b knockout mice. Parallel intestinal absorption studies were performed. Substrate physico-chemical profiling was undertaken. Using multivariate analysis a QSAR model was established. RESULTS: A subset of P-gp substrates (10/18) displayed pulmonary kinetics influenced by lung P-gp. These substrates possessed distinct physico-chemical properties to those P-gp substrates unaffected by P-gp (8/18). Differential outcomes were not related to different intrinsic P-gp transporter kinetics. In the lung, in contrast to intestine, a higher degree of non-polar character is required of a P-gp substrate before the net effects of efflux become evident. The QSAR predictive model was applied to 129 substrates including eight marketed inhaled drugs, all these inhaled drugs were predicted to display P-gp dependent pulmonary disposition. CONCLUSIONS: Lung P-gp can affect the pulmonary kinetics of a subset of P-gp substrates. Physico-chemical relationships determining the significance of P-gp to absorption in the lung are different to those operative in the intestine. Our QSAR framework may assist profiling of inhaled drug discovery candidates that are also P-gp substrates. The potential for P-gp mediated pulmonary disposition exists in the clinic.


Subject(s)
ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B/metabolism , Lung/metabolism , Pharmaceutical Preparations/metabolism , Respiratory Tract Absorption , ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B/genetics , Animals , Male , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Pharmaceutical Preparations/chemistry , Substrate Specificity , ATP-Binding Cassette Sub-Family B Member 4
2.
Eur J Med Chem ; 38(11-12): 939-47, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14642326

ABSTRACT

Literature data on the intestinal absorption of 158 drug and drug-like compounds in rats have been collected, and Abraham descriptors for the set of drugs have been calculated using the method of Platts and Abraham et al. Results show that there is a significant relationship between rat intestinal absorption and the Abraham descriptors. In agreement with the human intestinal absorption model, the dominant descriptors in the rat model are the drug hydrogen bond acidity and basicity. In order to compare the absorption models in humans and rats, the absorption model developed from rats was used to predict the absorption in humans. The rat intestinal absorption model is similar to the human absorption model, and data on rats can effectively be used to predict human intestinal absorption.


Subject(s)
Intestinal Absorption/physiology , Pharmaceutical Preparations/chemistry , Pharmaceutical Preparations/metabolism , Animals , Humans , Intestinal Absorption/drug effects , Predictive Value of Tests , Rats , Structure-Activity Relationship
3.
Eur J Med Chem ; 38(3): 233-43, 2003 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12667690

ABSTRACT

The absorption of 111 drug and drug-like compounds was evaluated from 111 references based on the ratio of urinary excretion of drugs following oral and intravenous administration to intact rats and biliary excretion of bile duct-cannulated rats. Ninety-eight drug compounds for which both human and rat absorption data were available were selected for correlation analysis between the human and rat absorption. The result shows that the extent of absorption in these two species is similar. For 94% of the drugs the absorption difference between humans and rats is less than 20% and for 98% of drugs the difference is less than 30%. There is only one drug for which human absorption is significantly different from rat absorption. The standard deviation is 11% between human and rat absorption. The linear relationship between human and rat absorption forced through the origin, as determined by least squares regression, is %Absorption (human)=0.997%Absorption (rat) (n=98, SD=11). It is suggested that the absorption in rats could be used as an alternative method to human absorption in pre-clinical oral absorption studies.


Subject(s)
Intestinal Absorption/physiology , Algorithms , Animals , Bile/metabolism , Biotransformation , Data Interpretation, Statistical , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Feces/chemistry , Humans , Injections, Intravenous , Pharmaceutical Preparations/metabolism , Rats , Species Specificity
4.
Pharm Res ; 19(10): 1446-57, 2002 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12425461

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To classify the dissolution and diffusion rate-limited drugs and establish quantitative relationships between absorption and molecular descriptors. METHODS: Absorption consists of kinetic transit processes in which dissolution, diffusion, or perfusion processes can become the rate-limited step. The absorption data of 238 drugs have been classified into either dissolution or diffusion rate-limited based on an equilibrium method developed from solubility, dose, and percentage of absorption. A nonlinear absorption model derived from first-order kinetics has been developed to identify the relationship between percentage of drug absorption and molecular descriptors. RESULTS: Regression analysis was performed between percentage of absorption and molecular descriptors. The descriptors used were ClogP, molecular polar surface area, the number of hydrogen-bonding acceptors and donors, and Abraham descriptors. Good relationships were found between absorption and Abraham descriptors or ClogP. CONCLUSIONS: The absorption models can predict the following three BCS (Biopharmaceutics Classification Scheme) classes of compounds: class I, high solubility and high permeability; class III, high solubility and low permeability; class IV, low solubility and low permeability. The absorption models overpredict the absorption of class II, low solubility and high permeability compounds because dissolution is the rate-limited step of absorption.


Subject(s)
Intestinal Absorption/physiology , Pharmaceutical Preparations/metabolism , Quantitative Structure-Activity Relationship , Administration, Oral , Humans , Regression Analysis
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