GSK3640254 is a next-generation maturation inhibitor in development for HIV-1 treatment, with pharmacokinetics (PK) supporting once-daily oral dosing in human. This open-label, nonrandomized, two-period clinical mass balance and excretion study was used to investigate the excretion balance, PK, and metabolism of GSK3640254. Five healthy men received a single intravenous microtracer of 100 lg [14C]GSK3640254 with a concomitant oral nonradiolabeled 200-mg tablet followed by an oral 85-mg dose of [14C]GSK3640254 14 days later. Complementary methods, including intravenous microtracing and accelerator mass spectrometry, allowed characterization of several parameters, including fraction absorbed, fraction escaping gut metabolism, hepatic extraction ratio, and renal clearance. Intravenous PK of GSK3640254 was characterized by low plasma clearance (1.04 l/h), moderate terminal phase half-life (21.7 hours), and low volume of distribution at steady state (28.7 L). Orally dosed GSK3640254 was absorbed (fraction absorbed, 0.26), with a high fraction escaping gut metabolism (0.898) and a low hepatic extraction ratio (0.00544), all consistent with low in vitro intrinsic clearance in liver microsomes and hepatocytes. No major metabolites in human plasma required further qualification in animal studies. Both unchanged parent GSK3640254 and its oxidative and conjugative metabolites were excreted into bile, with GSK3640254 likely subject to further metabolism through enterohepatic recirculation. Renal elimination of GSK3640254 as the parent drug or its metabolites was negligible, with >94% of total recovery of oral dose and >99% of the recovered radioactivity in feces. Altogether, the data suggest that systemically available GSK3640254 was slowly eliminated almost entirely by hepatobiliary secretion, primarily as conjugative and oxidative metabolites.
CITATION STYLE
Wen, B., Zhang, Y., Young, G. C., Kenworthy, D., Pereira, A., Pirhalla, J., … Johnson, M. (2022). Investigation of Clinical Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism, and Excretion and Pharmacokinetics of the HIV-1 Maturation Inhibitor GSK3640254 Using an Intravenous Microtracer Combined with EnteroTracker for Biliary Sampling. Drug Metabolism and Disposition, 50(11), 1442–1453. https://doi.org/10.1124/dmd.122.000955
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.