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Comparative Study
. 2004 Sep;32(9):937-42.

Evaluation of a novel in vitro Caco-2 hepatocyte hybrid system for predicting in vivo oral bioavailability

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  • PMID: 15319334
Comparative Study

Evaluation of a novel in vitro Caco-2 hepatocyte hybrid system for predicting in vivo oral bioavailability

Yau Yi Lau et al. Drug Metab Dispos. 2004 Sep.

Abstract

A novel in vitro Caco-2 hepatocyte hybrid system was set up and tested for its ability to predict the oral bioavailability (F) in humans of 24 randomly chosen marketed drugs. Caco-2 cells were cultured on the transwell filters to form tight junctions. Pooled cryopreserved human hepatocytes were placed in the basolateral receiver compartment. To evaluate the permeability and hepatic first pass in one experiment, compounds were dissolved in medium and added to the apical donor compartment of the transwell apparatus, and the amount of the parent compound appearing in the basolateral receiver compartment was determined over a 3-h time course. The area under the concentration versus time curve (AUC) of the parent compound was determined. The predictive usefulness of this Caco-2 hepatocyte model was tested by comparing the AUC with the in vivo oral bioavailability reported in the literature. Linear regression analysis shows a reasonable correlation (R(2) = 0.86) between the in vitro AUC and oral bioavailability reported in the literature. Based on the literature data, the compounds were classified into low (F < 20%), medium (20 < F < 50%), and high (F > 50%) bioavailability categories. The oral bioavailability predicted from the experimental Caco-2 hepatocyte system successfully matches the appropriate literature-based bioavailability category for 22 of 24 of the compounds. The results presented in this study suggest that it may be feasible to combine Caco-2 cells and hepatocytes into one system for the prediction of oral absorption and first-pass effect in humans.

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