In vitro and in vivo pharmacokinetic characterization of mavacamten, a first-in-class small molecule allosteric modulator of beta cardiac myosin.
Animals
Benzylamines
/ chemistry
Caco-2 Cells
Cardiac Myosins
/ metabolism
Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic
/ drug therapy
Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System
/ chemistry
Dogs
Drug Interactions
Hepatocytes
/ metabolism
Humans
Macaca fascicularis
Male
Metabolic Clearance Rate
Mice, Inbred ICR
Microsomes, Liver
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
Uracil
/ analogs & derivatives
Cardiac myosin modulator
MYK-461
allometric scaling
drug metabolism
mavacamten
pharmacokinetics
Journal
Xenobiotica; the fate of foreign compounds in biological systems
ISSN: 1366-5928
Titre abrégé: Xenobiotica
Pays: England
ID NLM: 1306665
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
Jun 2019
Jun 2019
Historique:
pubmed:
26
7
2018
medline:
13
9
2019
entrez:
26
7
2018
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
Mavacamten is a small molecule modulator of cardiac myosin designed as an orally administered drug for the treatment of patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. The current study objectives were to assess the preclinical pharmacokinetics of mavacamten for the prediction of human dosing and to establish the potential need for clinical pharmacokinetic studies characterizing drug-drug interaction potential. Mavacamten does not inhibit CYP enzymes, but at high concentrations relative to anticipated therapeutic concentrations induces CYP2B6 and CYP3A4 enzymes in vitro. Mavacamten showed high permeability and low efflux transport across Caco-2 cell membranes. In human hepatocytes, mavacamten was not a substrate for drug transporters OATP, OCT and NTCP. Mavacamten was determined to have minimal drug-drug interaction risk. In vitro mavacamten metabolite profiles included phase I- and phase II-mediated metabolism cross-species. Major pathways included aromatic hydroxylation (M1), aliphatic hydroxylation (M2); N-dealkylation (M6), and glucuronidation of the M1-metabolite (M4). Reaction phenotyping revealed CYPs 2C19 and 3A4/3A5 predominating. Mavacamten demonstrated low clearance, high volume of distribution, long terminal elimination half-life and excellent oral bioavailability cross-species. Simple four-species allometric scaling led to predicted plasma clearance, volume of distribution and half-life of 0.51 mL/min/kg, 9.5 L/kg and 9 days, respectively, in human.
Identifiants
pubmed: 30044681
doi: 10.1080/00498254.2018.1495856
doi:
Substances chimiques
Benzylamines
0
MYK-461
0
Uracil
56HH86ZVCT
Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System
9035-51-2
Cardiac Myosins
EC 3.6.1.-
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM