A unified model for predicting human hepatic, metabolic clearance from in vitro intrinsic clearance data in hepatocytes and microsomes
- PMID: 15932954
- DOI: 10.1124/dmd.105.004259
A unified model for predicting human hepatic, metabolic clearance from in vitro intrinsic clearance data in hepatocytes and microsomes
Abstract
The aim of this study was to evaluate a unified method for predicting human in vivo intrinsic clearance (CL(int, in vivo)) and hepatic clearance (CL(h)) from in vitro data in hepatocytes and microsomes by applying the unbound fraction in blood (fu(b)) and in vitro incubations (fu(inc)). Human CL(int, in vivo) was projected using in vitro data together with biological scaling factors and compared with the unbound intrinsic clearance (CL(int, ub, in vivo)) estimated from clinical data using liver models with and without the various fu terms. For incubations conducted with fetal calf serum (n=14), the observed CL(int, in vivo) was modeled well assuming fu(inc) and fu(b) were equivalent. CL(int, ub, in vivo) was predicted best using both fu(b) and fu(inc) for other hepatocyte data (n=56; r(2)=0.78, p=3.3 x 10(-19), average fold error=5.2). A similar model for CL(int, ub, in vivo) was established for microsomal data (n=37; r(2)=0.77, p=1.2 x 10(-12), average fold error=6.1). Using the model for CL(int, ub, in vivo) (including a further empirical scaling factor), the CL(h) in humans was also calculated according to the well stirred liver model for the most extensive dataset. CL(int, in vivo) and CL(h) were both predicted well using in vitro human data from several laboratories for acidic, basic, and neutral drugs. The direct use of this model using only in vitro human data to predict the metabolic component of CL(h) is attractive, as it does not require extra information from preclinical studies in animals.
Comment in
-
Binding of drugs to hepatic microsomes: comment and assessment of current prediction methodology with recommendation for improvement.Drug Metab Dispos. 2006 Apr;34(4):724-6; author reply 727. doi: 10.1124/dmd.105.007658. Drug Metab Dispos. 2006. PMID: 16552024 No abstract available.
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
