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      Prediction of drug-drug interactions using physiologically-based pharmacokinetic models of CYP450 modulators included in Simcyp software.

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          Abstract

          In recent years, physiologically based PharmacoKinetic (PBPK) modeling has received growing interest as a useful tool for the assessment of drug pharmacokinetics. It has been demonstrated to be informative and helpful to quantify the modification in drug exposure due to specific physio-pathological conditions, age, genetic polymorphisms, ethnicity and particularly drug-drug interactions (DDIs). In this paper, the prediction success of DDIs involving various cytochrome P450 isoenzyme (CYP) modulators namely ketoconazole (a competitive inhibitor of CYP3A), itraconazole (a competitive inhibitor of CYP3A), clarithromycin (a mechanism-based inhibitor of CYP3A), quinidine (a competitive inhibitor of CYP2D6), paroxetine (a mechanism-based inhibitor of CYP2D6), ciprofloxacin (a competitive inhibitor of CYP1A2), fluconazole (a competitive inhibitor of CYP2C9/2C19) and rifampicin (an inducer of CYP3A) were assessed using Simcyp® software. The aim of this report was to establish confidence in each CYP-specific modulator file so they can be used in the future for the prediction of DDIs involving new victim compounds. Our evaluation of these PBPK models suggested that they can be successfully used to evaluate DDIs in untested scenarios. The only noticeable exception concerned a quinidine inhibitor model that requires further improvement. Additionally, other important aspects such as model validation criteria were discussed.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Biopharm Drug Dispos
          Biopharmaceutics & drug disposition
          Wiley
          1099-081X
          0142-2782
          Jan 2018
          : 39
          : 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Division of Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology, Geneva University Hospitals, Switzerland.
          [2 ] School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Geneva and Lausanne Universities, Switzerland.
          [3 ] Swiss Center for Applied Human Toxicology (SCAHT), University of Basel, Switzerland.
          [4 ] Faculty of Medicine, Geneva University, Switzerland.
          Article
          10.1002/bdd.2107
          28960401
          dd84043d-b3a3-45f4-8ee4-cb7561d3caee
          Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
          History

          PBPK,Simcyp,cytochrome P450,drug-drug interactions,physiologically-based pharmacokinetic modeling

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