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Correlations between Factors Determining the Pharmacokinetics and Antiviral Activity of HIV-1 Non-Nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors of the Diaryltriazine and Diarylpyrimidine Classes of Compounds

 

作者: Paul Lewi,   Eddy Arnold,   Koen Andries,   Hilde Bohets,   Herman Borghys,   Arthur Clark,   Frits Daeyaert,   Kalyan Das,   Marie-Pierre de Béthune,   Marc de Jonge,   Jan Heeres,   Luc Koymans,   Jos Leempoels,   Jef Peeters,   Philip Timmerman,   Walter Van den Broeck,   Frédéric Vanhoutte,   Gerben van‘t Klooster,   Maarten Vinkers,   Yulia Volovik,   Paul AJ Janssen,  

 

期刊: Drugs in R & D  (ADIS Available online 2004)
卷期: Volume 5, issue 5  

页码: 245-257

 

ISSN:1174-5886

 

年代: 2004

 

出版商: ADIS

 

关键词: Non nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, pharmacodynamics;HIV 1 infections, treatment;Non nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, pharmacokinetics

 

数据来源: ADIS

 

摘要:

ObjectiveTo investigate the important factors that determine the bioavailability and the antiviral activity of the diaryltriazine (DATA) and diarylpyrimidine (DAPY) non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) of HIV-1 in animal species and humans using cell-based assays, physicochemical and computed parameters.MethodsThis naturalistic study included 15 parameters ranging from molecular mechanics calculations to phase I clinical trials. The calculated parameters were solvent-accessible surface area (SASA), polar surface area and Gibbs free energy of solvation. Physicochemical parameters comprised lipophilicity (octanol/water partition coefficient [cLogP]), ionisation constant (pKa), solubility and aggregate radius. Cell-based assays included human colonic adenocarcinoma cell (Caco-2) permeability (transepithelial transport), drug metabolism and antiviral activity (negative logarithm of the molar effective concentration inhibiting viral replication by 50% [pEC50]). Exposure was tested in rats, dogs and human volunteers.ResultsOf the 15 parameters, eight correlated consistently among one another. Exposure (area under the plasma concentration-time curve [AUC]) in humans correlated positively with that in rats (r = 1.00), with transepithelial transport (r = 0.83), lipophilicity (r = 0.60), ionisability (r = 0.89), hydrodynamic radius of aggregates (r = 0.66) and with antiviral activity (r = 0.61). Exposure in humans was also seen to correlate negatively with SASA (r = −0.89). No consistent correlation was found between exposure in dogs and the eight parameters. Of the 14 DATA/DAPY molecules, 11 form aggregates with radii between 34 and 100nm.ConclusionsWe observed correlations between exposure in humans with exposure in rats, transepithelial transport (Caco-2 cells), ionisability, lipophilicity, aggregate radius and SASA in the class of DATA/DAPY NNRTI compounds. The lipophilic DATA/DAPY compounds form aggregates. It can be assumed that absorption in the intestinal tract and endocytosis in infected cells of these lipophilic compounds are governed by the common phenomenon of aggregate formation. As the lymphatic system offers a pathway for intestinal uptake of aggregates, this may offer a therapeutic advantage in the treatment of HIV-1 infection. Although it was not the objective of the study, we found that the rat was a betterin vivomodel than the dog for the prediction of systemic exposure in this particular set of compounds.

 

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