Abstract
The eastern woodchuck (Marmota monax) is a hibernating species extensively used as an in vivo efficacy model for chronic human hepatitisB virus infection. Under laboratory conditions, woodchucks develop a pseudohibernation condition; thus, the pharmacokinetics (PK) of small-molecule therapeutics may be affected by the seasonal change. The seasonal PK of four probe compounds were characterized over 12 months in seven male and nine female laboratorymaintained woodchucks. These compounds were selected to study changes in oxidative metabolism [antipyrine (AP)], glucuronidation [raltegravir (RTG)], renal clearance [lamivudine (3TC)], and hepatic function [indocyanine green (ICG)]. Seasonal changes in physiologic parameters and PK were determined. Seasonal body weight increases were 30%. Seasonal changes in body temperature and heart rate were <10%. The mean AP exposure remained unchanged from April to August 2017, followed by a significant increase ( 1.0- fold) from August to December and subsequent decrease to baseline at the end of study. A similar trend was observed in RTG and 3TC exposures. The ICG exposure remained unchanged. No significant sex difference in PK was observed, although female woodchucks appeared to be less susceptible to seasonal PK and body weight changes. Significant seasonal PK changes for AP, RTG, and 3TC indicate decreases in oxidative metabolism, phase II glucuronidation, and renal clearance during pseudohibernation. The lack of seasonal change in ICG exposure suggests there are no significant changes in hepatic function. This information can be used to optimize the scheduling of woodchuck studies to avoid seasonally driven variation in drug PK.
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CITATION STYLE
Zheng, J., Balsitis, S., Santos, R., Smith, B. J., & Subramanian, R. (2020). Characterization of seasonal pharmacokinetic variability in woodchucks. Drug Metabolism and Disposition, 48(11), 1199–1209. https://doi.org/10.1124/dmd.120.000140
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