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Clinical Trial
. 1994;35(2):101-8.
doi: 10.1007/BF00686630.

Protein binding of brequinar in the plasma of healthy donors and cancer patients and analysis of the relationship between protein binding and pharmacokinetics in cancer patients

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Protein binding of brequinar in the plasma of healthy donors and cancer patients and analysis of the relationship between protein binding and pharmacokinetics in cancer patients

S Y King et al. Cancer Chemother Pharmacol. 1994.

Abstract

The protein binding of weakly acidic and basic drugs has been shown to be altered in cancer patients. Brequinar is a weakly acidic, low-clearance, and highly protein-bound (> 98% bound) antitumor agent. The pharmacokinetic parameters of brequinar are subject to large interpatient variability. This large interpatient variability may be related to brequinar's plasma protein-binding capacity (assuming no change in the intrinsic clearance of the unbound drug). The objectives of this study, therefore, were (a) to characterize brequinar's protein binding in the plasma of healthy donors and cancer patients and (b) to examine the relationships between brequinar's plasma protein binding and its pharmacokinetics in patients. Brequinar protein binding was determined in human serum albumin (HSA) solution, drug-free donor plasma, and brequinar-free, predose plasma samples obtained from a phase I cancer trial. Pharmacokinetic results from this study were used to examine relationships between plasma protein binding and drug disposition. In HSA solution and healthy donor plasma, brequinar's protein binding as determined using spiked samples was concentration-dependent. The unbound brequinar fraction increased by a factor of 3 (from 0.3% to 0.9% free) in 4% HSA solution and by a factor of 4 (from 0.4% to 1.6% free) in donor plasma as the brequinar concentrations increased from 0.1 to 2.3 mM in the HSA solution and from 0.076 to 1.5 mM in the donor plasma. Analysis of brequinar binding characteristics using the binding ratio and Rosenthal binding plots showed that albumin was the primary protein for brequinar binding in human plasma. The addition of various concentrations of alpha 1-acid glycoprotein to 4% HSA solution did not affect the protein binding of brequinar to HSA. The protein binding determined in the plasma of cancer patients was not quantitatively different, except for variability, from that observed in the plasma of healthy donors. Examination of relationships between the unbound brequinar fraction and pharmacokinetics suggested that plasma protein binding was not a major determinant of brequinar disposition in cancer patients.

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