Abstract
Low-dose oral S-ketamine is increasingly used in chronic pain therapy, but extensive cytochrome P450 (CYP) mediated metabolism makes it prone to pharmacokinetic drug-drug interactions (DDIs). In our study, concentration-time data from five studies were used to develop a semimechanistic model that describes the ticlopidine-mediated inhibition of S-ketamine biotransformation. A mechanistic model was implemented to account for reversible and time-dependent hepatic CYP2B6 inactivation by ticlopidine, which causes elevated S-ketamine exposure in vivo. A pharmacokinetic model was developed with gut wall and hepatic clearances for S-ketamine, its primary metabolite norketamine, and ticlopidine. Nonlinear mixed effects modeling approach was used (NONMEM version 7.3.0), and the final model was evaluated with visual predictive checks and the sampling-importance-resampling procedure. Our final model produces biologically plausible output and demonstrates that ticlopidine is a strong inhibitor of CYP2B6 mediated S-ketamine metabolism. Simulations from our model may be used to evaluate chronic pain therapy with S-ketamine.
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CITATION STYLE
Ashraf, M. W., Peltoniemi, M. A., Olkkola, K. T., Neuvonen, P. J., & Saari, T. I. (2018). Semimechanistic Population Pharmacokinetic Model to Predict the Drug–Drug Interaction Between S-ketamine and Ticlopidine in Healthy Human Volunteers. CPT: Pharmacometrics and Systems Pharmacology, 7(10), 687–697. https://doi.org/10.1002/psp4.12346
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