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Drug Transporters: Report from the International Transporter Consortium; Decisions, Impact and Future Directions Delaware Valley Drug Metabolism Discussion Group May 12th, 2010 Donald Tweedie Director, Drug Metabolism Drug Transporter White Paper Nature Reviews Drug Discovery 9, 215 - 236 , (2010) ‘Membrane Transporters in Drug Development’ The International Transporter Consortium. Corresponding Authors: [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] NEDMDG, March 2010 2 Outline International Transporter Consortium (ITC) • Genesis • Goals • White paper – How we got there – What it is – What it is not – Examples, MDR1, OATP, decisions tree(s) • Current Issues, Challenges, and Actions • Future Activities Conclusions Acknowledgements NEDMDG, March 2010 3 Genesis – ITC PhRMA Pharmaceutical and Research Manufacturers of America • Advocacy forum for the industry to influence the FDA (PhRMA – America) • Drug Metabolism Technical Group (DMTG) – Subgroup responsible for DMPK issues – (MIST, DDI, pharmacogenomics, time-dependent inhibition)1 – Nov 2007, transporters identified as a key topic • Academic group headed by Kathy Giacomini and Toshi Ishikawa were considering initiating a global committee to generate a white paper providing preferred approaches to conduct transporter studies 1Baillie et al. (2002) Drug metabolites in safety testing Toxicol. Appl. Pharmacol. 182, 188-96 Bjornsson et al. (2004) The Conduct of In Vitro and In Vivo Drug-Drug Interaction Studies: A Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) Perspective. Drug Metabolism and Disposition 31, 815-832 and Journal of Clinical Pharmacology 43, 443-469. Williams et al. (2008) PhRMA white paper on pharmacogenomics J Clin Pharmacol. 48(7), 849-89 Grimm SW et al. (2009) The conduct of in vitro studies to address time-dependent inhibition of drug-metabolizing enzymes: a perspective of the pharmaceutical research and manufacturers of America. Drug Metabolism and Disposition 37(7):1355-1370 NEDMDG, March 2010 4 Transporters Key goals for the ITC • Provide an update on current thinking on transporters. • For in vitro studies, provide a focus on studies that can have a viable clinical interpretation (avoid raising red flags with in vitro studies that cannot be addressed in vivo in the clinic). • Explore gaps and suggest ways forward. • Provide a coordinated approach (Academia, Industry and Regulatory). • Help to move the science forward. – Decision trees to assist drug development and regulatory – Consensus on current scientific status NEDMDG, March 2010 5 International Transporter Consortium Workshop Bethesda North Marriott October 2nd and 3rd, 2008 • Sponsored by FDA Critical Path • Workshop organized by Drug Information Association (DIA) • Co-sponsorship by AAPS, ISSX, PhRMA • Provide a focus to initiate a White Paper for completion in 2009 NEDMDG, March 2010 6 ITC Original Members Academia: Kim Brouwer Kathy Giacomini UCSF Toshi Ishikawa Dietrich Keppler Heidelberg Richard Kim Peter Swann Regulatory: Shiew Mei Huang FDA Lei Zhang NEDMDG, March 2010 UNC OSC, Tokyo W. Ontario Maryland Industry: Raymond Evers Merck Volker Fischer Kate Hillgren Joe Polli Donald Tweedie BI Joe Ware Abbott Lilly GSK Genentech FDA 7 ITC author list Academia: Les Benet Kim Brouwer Amber Dahlin Kathy Giacomini UCSF Toshi Ishikawa Dietrich Keppler Heidelberg Richard Kim Mikko Niemi Yuichi Sugiyama Tokyo Peter Swann Steve Wright Sook Wah Yee Regulatory: Shiew Mei Huang FDA Lei Zhang NEDMDG, March 2010 UCSF UNC UCSF OSC, Tokyo W. Ontario Helsinki Maryland Arizona UCSF Industry: Xiaoyan Chu Raymond Evers Merck Volker Fischer Kate Hillgren Keith A. Hoffmaster Caroline Lee Joe Polli Donald Tweedie BI Joe Ware Maciej ZamekGliszczynski Merck Abbott Lilly Novartis Pfizer GSK Genentech Lilly FDA 8 ITC author list Academia: Les Benet Kim Brouwer Amber Dahlin Kathy Giacomini UCSF Toshi Ishikawa Dietrich Keppler Heidelberg Richard Kim Mikko Niemi Yuichi Sugiyama Tokyo Peter Swann Steve Wright Sook Wah Yee Regulatory: Shiew Mei Huang FDA Lei Zhang NEDMDG, March 2010 UCSF UNC UCSF OSC, Tokyo W. Ontario Helsinki Maryland Arizona UCSF Industry: Xiaoyan Chu Raymond Evers Merck Volker Fischer Kate Hillgren Keith A. Hoffmaster Caroline Lee Joe Polli Donald Tweedie BI Joe Ware Maciej ZamekGliszczynski Merck Abbott Lilly Novartis Pfizer GSK Genentech Lilly FDA 9 ITC author list Academia: Les Benet Kim Brouwer Amber Dahlin Kathy Giacomini Giacomini UCSF UCSF Toshi Ishikawa Dietrich Keppler Heidelberg Richard Kim Mikko Niemi Yuichi Sugiyama Tokyo Peter Swann Steve Wright Sook Wah Yee Regulatory: Shiew Mei Huang FDA Lei Zhang NEDMDG, March 2010 UCSF UNC UCSF OSC, Tokyo W. Ontario Helsinki Maryland Arizona UCSF Industry: Xiaoyan Chu Raymond Evers Merck Volker Fischer Kate Hillgren Keith A. Hoffmaster Caroline Lee Joe Polli Donald Tweedie BI Joe Ware Maciej ZamekGliszczynski Merck Abbott Lilly Novartis Pfizer GSK Genentech Lilly FDA 10 White paper Drug Transporters in Drug Development The International Transporter Consortium, ITC 1. Basic Introduction and Summary of Transporters – Highlights what we know 2. Methods for Studying Transporters – Current solutions and future prospects 3. Drug Development Issues – Decision trees NEDMDG, March 2010 11 Section 1 Transporters covered • Efflux: P-gp, BCRP • Renal: OAT/OCT • Hepatic uptake: OATP Other transporters not discussed in detail • MRPs • MATEs • Considered less critical in the overall view • But could be important for specific drugs? NEDMDG, March 2010 12 Tables of Substrates and Inhibitors NEDMDG, March 2010 14 Section 2. Methods for Studying Transporters A. Cell and Membrane Models B. Intact Organ/In Vivo Models C. Methods to Measure the Contribution of Transporters to Tissue Distribution and Excretion D. Interplay of Efflux Transporters and Enzymes E. Coordination of Influx and Efflux Transporters and Enzymes in the Clearance of Drugs F. Computational Models NEDMDG, March 2010 15 Section 3. Drug Development Issues Box 2. Decision trees for P-gp or BCRP substrate interactions Box 3. Decision trees for P-gp or BCRP inhibitor interactions Box 4. Decision trees for OCT or OAT substrate interactions Box 5. Decision trees for OCT or OAT inhibitor interactions Box 6. Decision trees for OATP interactions Box 7. OATP1B1 Decision Analysis: Case Studies Summary and Conclusions NEDMDG, March 2010 16 P-gp Substrate NEDMDG, March 2010 17 Current issues? Decision Trees Pros • evolution of concepts • highlight discussion points • offers flexibility Cons • rigid interpretation – prescriptive and overly cautious • insufficient knowledge to populate the decision points • lack of selective substrates and inhibitors ‘The evolution and appropriate application of these decision trees will require constant monitoring. How can this be achieved with an assured and encompassing measure of success?’ NEDMDG, March 2010 18 Decision Trees - Current issue with P-gp? False Positives (unnecessary clinical studies) Alert for [I]1/IC50 ≥ 0.1 or [I]2/IC50 ≥10, – [I]1 is steady-state total Cmax at the highest clinical dose – [I]2 is the GI concentration calculated as dose (mg)/250 mL [I]2/IC50 > 10 will be exceeded at a dose of ~12 mg for a drug with an inhibition potency of ~10 µM in vitro (MW ~ 500). False Negatives (safety concerns) NEDMDG, March 2010 19 White Paper - What it is A consensus view on the current thinking on drug transporters • What are the current realities The known knowns • What do we know about the relative importance of all transporters? • Where do you put your effort? The known unknowns • What facts are known to be untrue (dispelling myths)? • Where are our gaps in knowledge (so where should we focus short and long term to increase our knowledge)? A guideline (not a guidance) towards what we should focus on currently • What are we capable of addressing? NEDMDG, March 2010 20 White Paper - What it is not A complete literature review. A prescriptive guidance on what to do and how to do it, with a clear description of what it will mean. A consensus document that everyone agrees to. A description of all of the exceptions. • Your experience is important to you and we would certainly appreciate you sharing that with the scientific community to educate us all. The decision trees are clearly not definitive. • Included to help move the science forward by acting as templates for discussion • P-gp most mature but not perfect NEDMDG, March 2010 21 What are some of the current issues? The issues presented by transporters are significantly more complex than for DMEs Involved in absorption, distribution and excretion, so multiple processes of concern Broad tissue distribution; different effects at different sites, e.g. P-gp at intestine and BBB Redundancy; different transporters (P-gp and BCRP) and different subfamilies (OATP1B1 and 1B3) Uptake and efflux transporters (need to consider both to assess the overall effect) Applicability of kinetic parameters and their interpretation NEDMDG, March 2010 22 Transporter Interaction Redundancy: Drugs that are shown to interact with one transporter typically interact with multiple transporters. Thus, multiple pathways for clearance are possible for transporter substrates. Ieiri et al. (2009) Expert Opinion in Drug Metabolism and Toxicology, 5: 703-729. NEDMDG, March 2010 Slide courtesy of Dr. Mitchell Taub 23 Lack of selective inhibitors of drug transporters 1999 • LY 335979 (zosuquidar) is a potent inhibitor/modulator of P-gp, but does not inhibit MRP1 or MRP2. 1999 – 2003 • Discovery, cloning, and publication of OATP superfamily of uptake transporters [References 2-5] • Selectivity over inhibition of CYP3A4 is ~60-fold. [Reference 1] 1. Dantzig et al. (1999) JPET 290, 854-862 2. Hsiang et al. (1999) J Biol Chem 274, 37161-8 3. Abe et al. (1999) J Biol Chem 274, 17159-63 4. Konig et al. (2000) Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol 278, G156-64 5. Hagenbuch. & Meier (2003) Biochim Biophys Acta 1609, 1-18 6. Oostendorp et al. (2009) DMD 37, 917-923 NEDMDG, March 2010 2009 • OATP1B1-mediated uptake of anticancer drugs gimatecan and BNP1350 were inhibited by zosuquidar. • The effect of modulators on the plasma pharmacokinetics of OATP1B1 substrate drugs may not be solely ascribed to inhibition of P-gp [Reference 6] Slide courtesy of Dr. Mitchell Taub 24 P-gp at the Blood-Brain Barrier: Clinical DDI? NEDMDG, March 2010 Sadeque et al. (2000). Clin Pharmacol Ther 68(3): 231-7 25 P-gp at the Blood-Brain Barrier: Species Differences P-gp inhibitor P-gp inhibitor dosage Quinidine 600 mg Quinidine 600 mg Drug Clinical usage of the (P-gp substrate) drug Plasma AUC and Cmax CNS effect Pupil diameter Oral AUC ↑ 171%, Cmax ↑162% Quinidine had no major influence on fentanyl pharmacodynamics in humans. No (1) Loperamide A peripherally acting Respiratory opioid receptor response to CO2 agonist for treatment rebreathing of chronic diarrhea AUC ↑ 148% Respiratory depression occurred when loperamide was given with quinidine. Yes? (2) Pupil size AUC ↑ 80% Pupil size decreased with coadministration of quinidine. Yes? (3) Pupil diameter i.v. AUC and Cmax, no No effect on methadone miosis after changes i.v. administration No (4) Pupil diameter No effect on i.v. morphine miosis, Oral AUC ↑60% , Cmax Difference in oral morphine miosis were commensurated with changes in ↑88% plasma morphine concentration. No (5) No (6) No (7) Fentanyl Synthetic opioid Quinidine 800 mg Loperamide A peripherally acting opioid receptor agonist for treatment of chronic diarrhea Quinidine 600 mg Methadone Opioid Quinidine 600 mg Morphine Opioid Quinidine 800 mg Morphine Opioid 800 mg Morphine 6glucuronide An active metabolite of morphine Quinidine Brain P-gp Reference inhibition CNS exposure index Pupil diameter and Plasma concentration, Not result in an enhancement of central respiratory response no change nervous opioid effects. to CO2 rebreathing Pupil size No effect on the pharmacokinetics of morphine 6glucuronide No effect. (1) Kharasch et al. J Clin Pharmacol. 44:224-233 (2004) (2) Sadeque et al. Clin Pharmacol Ther. 68:231-237 (2000) (3) Skarke et al. Pharmacogenetics. 13:651-660 (2003) (4) Kharasch et al. Br J Clin Pharmacol. 57:600-610 (2004) (5) Kharasch et al. Clin Pharmacol Ther. 74:543-554 (2003) (6) Skarke et al. Clin Pharmacol Ther. 74:303-311 (2003) (7) Skarke et al. Anesthesiology. 101:1394-1399 (2004) NEDMDG, March 2010 Slide courtesy of Dr. Yongmei Li 26 Can digoxin be used as a clinical P-gp probe substrate? Fenner et al. (2009) CPT 85, 173-181 Narrow therapeutic window of digoxin requires close monitoring Abundant digoxin clinical DDI study data – especially for relatively new drugs Digoxin currently viewed as the “gold standard” probe for studying clinical P-gp–related DDIs • recent data may indicate that digoxin interacts with other transporters; OATPs NEDMDG, March 2010 27 Human CNS P-gp localization: PET Imaging MRI - CsA + CsA • 11C-verapamil and CsA dosed IV • AUCbrain/AUCblood of 11C-radioactivity ↑ 88% in the presence of CsA • ↑ 770% in similar study in mouse NEDMDG, March 2010 Sasongko et al CPT (2005) 77:503-514; Hendrikse et al Br. J. Pharmacol. (1998) 124:1413-1418 28 P-gp at the Blood-Brain Barrier: Mouse KO NEDMDG, March 2010 A. Ayrton and P. Morgan. Role of transport proteins in drug absorption, distribution and excretion, Xenobiotica. 31:469-497 (2001) 29 ITC Transporter Workshop (2008) Mikko Niemi - University of Helsinki NEDMDG, March 2010 30 Clinical Pharmacology Advisory Committee Meeting Topic 4: Transporter-Mediated Drug-Drug Interactions Atlanta, GA, March 17, 2010 Transporter-Mediated Drug-Drug Interactions (DDIs) Lei Zhang, Ph.D. Special Assistant to Office Director Office of Clinical Pharmacology Office of Translational Sciences CDER, FDA [email protected] 31 Question 1 For evaluation of NMEs as potential substrates of transporters: a. Do you agree that P-gp, BCRP, OATP1B1/1B3, OAT1/3 and OCT2 are the major transporters that should be routinely evaluated based on the proposed flow chart during drug development? [VOTING] b. What transporter(s) should be included in the flow chart for routine study and why? c. What alternative criteria would you suggest to identify transporters that would have clinical significance and should be studied? 32 Question 2 For evaluation of NMEs as potential inhibitors of transporters: a. Do you agree that P-gp, BCRP, OATP1B1/1B3, OAT1/3 and OCT2 are the major transporters that should be routinely evaluated based on the proposed flow chart during drug development? [VOTING] b. What transporter(s) should be included in the flow chart for routine study and why? c. What alternative criteria would you suggest to identify transporters that would have clinical significance and should be studied? 33 FDA advisory Board Meeting: ASCPT Conference: Atlanta, March 2010 FDA brought to the committee several voting questions …….. …the panel voted 12-4 that P-glycoprotein, BCRP and OATP1B1/1B3, OAT 1/3 and OCT 2 are the major transporters that mediate DDI and all NME should routinely be evaluated …. as substrates for these transporters…. Those voting no agreed the proposed transporters are reasonable, but cited the absence of appropriate tools to conduct the studies. "Throwing this out there to the pharmaceutical industry, it's just not ready for prime time yet. We need more tools," argued Gregory Kearns, Children's Mercy Hospitals & Clinics of Kansas City, Mo. Jerry Collins of the National Cancer Institute agreed, saying it would be better to invest in developing the tools - which garnered concurrence from other committee members. Citing the burden on industry, Howard McLeod, University of North Carolina, also suggested that "in the future, every time we want to add something, we should also identify something we want to take away." Caldwell, who supported the expanded testing, said "the tools are coming, and quickly," while Thummel, another proponent of the testing, contended that the preclinical tools are available. The vote was 11-5 on a question of routinely evaluating all NMEs as inhibitors of the same transporters NEDMDG, March 2010 34 Future Interactions AAPS Website Intended to be active soon (Maciej J Zamek-Gliszczynski; Lilly) Email link to provide comments and questions@??mail.com • Collate common questions • Future chat rooms • Collate thoughts and concerns for future white paper(s) • Others? NEDMDG, March 2010 35 Overall Conclusions/Impact Transporters are a very dynamic field – the white paper is intended to be a snapshot White paper will need to be updated (timeline?) White paper provides framework for FDA to add to current guidance(s) – DDI Emphasizes the need for flexibility • which provides some realistic challenges for regulatory agencies Has identified areas of highest immediate need • decision trees for other transporters • relevance of unbound drug concentrations Never intended to be a panacea Focus group for collating new data NEDMDG, March 2010 36 Moving Forward Committee of FDA and Pharma • Lei Zhang ([email protected] ) and Donald Tweedie ([email protected] ) Main committee with sub-committees for specific topics • Identify experts for different transporters • Identify experts for selected topics (P-gp and digoxin, kinetics) Outcome • Provide feedback on discussions, action items • Make recommendations – change current practices – monitor specific practices • Publish mini-white papers NEDMDG, March 2010 37 Acknowledgements ITC members • Shiew Mei Huang, FDA • Kathy Giacomini, UCSF DMTG, PhRMA • Volker Fischer DIA (Drug Information Assocation) Mitch Taub, Boehringer Ingelheim Yongmei Li, Boehringer Ingelheim NEDMDG, March 2010 38 Acknowledgements Academia: Les Benet Kim Brouwer Amber Dahlin Kathy Giacomini UCSF Toshi Ishikawa Dietrich Keppler Heidelberg Richard Kim Mikko Niemi Yuichi Sugiyama Tokyo Peter Swann Steve Wright Sook Wah Yee Regulatory: Shiew Mei Huang FDA Lei Zhang NEDMDG, March 2010 UCSF UNC UCSF OSC, Tokyo W. Ontario Helsinki Maryland Arizona UCSF Industry: Xiaoyan Chu Raymond Evers Merck Volker Fischer Kate Hillgren Keith A. Hoffmaster Caroline Lee Joe Polli Donald Tweedie BI Joe Ware Maciej ZamekGliszczynski Merck Abbott Lilly Novartis Pfizer GSK Genentech Lilly FDA 39