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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, February 2009, p. 646-650, Vol. 53, No. 2
0066-4804/09/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AAC.00905-08
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Faculté de Pharmacie, University of Montreal, Montreal, Canada,1 Achillion Pharmaceuticals, Inc., New Haven, Connecticut,2 Cetero Research, Cary, North Carolina3
Received 8 July 2008/ Accepted 8 November 2008
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New HIV drugs with favorable pharmacokinetics (PK) profiles as well as improved safety profiles are being developed. These new drugs, which make innovative dosing regimens possible, could simplify the HAART regimen, potentially increasing compliance.
Elvucitabine (2',3'-dideoxy-2',3'-didehydro-β-L-5-fluorocytidine), an investigational L-cytosine NRTI, showed a 5- to 10-fold-improved in vitro activity against wild-type HIV isolates (50% inhibitory concentration of
1 ng/ml in peripheral blood mononuclear cells) compared to lamivudine. In addition, elvucitabine also showed potentially greater activity against a variety of nucleoside resistant viral isolates, particularly those that are resistant to zidovudine and tenofovir. Preclinical in vitro data for elvucitabine showed that elvucitabine has a plasma protein binding of less than 10%, is metabolized intracellularly into monophosphate, diphosphate, and triphosphate analytes (with elvucitabine triphosphate having a half-life of at least 20 h), has no other significant metabolites (i.e., was not metabolized by CYP enzymes), and is not an inducer or an inhibitor of CYP enzymes. Additionally, preclinical animal studies demonstrated that elvucitabine has a bioavailability of approximately 50% in dogs and has increasing exposure with increasing doses in mouse, rat, and dog studies. Preliminary phase I PK studies of elvucitabine demonstrated that elvucitabine has a long half-life, which could potentially make innovative dosing regimens possible.
The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of a single dose of 300 mg of ritonavir on the plasma PK of a single dose of 20 mg of elvucitabine when the drugs were coadministered in healthy subjects. As ritonavir is a protease inhibitor often used in boosted protease inhibitor regimens, such as Kaletra, it is important to know the effect that it may have on elvucitabine's profile. Ritonavir is a protease inhibitor that causes multiple drug interactions. Ritonavir inhibits intestinal ABCB1 transporters and CYP3A enzymes. Ritonavir also inhibit hepatic CYP2D6 and possibly CYP2C9, CYP2C19, and CYP1A2 enzymes (4, 7, 9). Ritonavir also has a high plasma protein binding (>98%) that may cause it to displace other medications (6).
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Drug analysis. Plasma samples were analyzed for elvucitabine concentrations by a sensitive and specific validated liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry assay (11). The plasma analytical range was 0.500 ng/ml to 100 ng/ml. The precision (coefficient of variation) was less than or equal to 5.2%, and accuracy (bias) ranged from 0.3 to 3.3% for concentrations of 1.5, 15, and 75 ng/ml.
Noncompartmental PK analysis.
Standard noncompartmental analyses were performed on the elvucitabine concentration-versus-time data. The following PK parameters were observed or calculated for elvucitabine administered alone and coadministered with a single dose of 300 mg of ritonavir: maximum observed concentration (Cmax), time of maximum observed concentration (Tmax), area under the curve from time zero to 24 h (AUC0-24), area under the curve from time zero to the last measurable concentration (AUC0-t), area under the curve from time zero to infinity (AUC0-
), elimination rate constant (kel), and half-life (t1/2). Noncompartmental analyses were performed using Kinetica version 4.3 (InnaPhase Corporation).
Population compartmental PK analysis. Compartmental PK analyses were performed on elvucitabine data from all subjects. Individual analyses were first performed using maximum-likelihood in ADAPT-II release IV (3). The model discrimination process was based on minimization of the values of the Akaike information criterion test, of the minimum value of the objective function, and of the residual variability. An additional criterion considered in the discrimination process was the maximization of the average coefficient of determination. A population PK analysis was then performed on the final model using an iterative two-stage methodology (IT2S) (1) using previously obtained data from the ADAPT-II analysis in order to get the most accurate population PK parameters, variance, residual variability and individual results. All systemic concentrations of elvucitabine were modeled using a weighting procedure of Wj = 1/Sj2, where the variance Sj2 was calculated for each observation (Y) using the formula (a + b · Y)2. The parameters a and b are the intercept and slope of the variance model. The slope is the residual variability proportional to each concentration, and the intercept is the additive component of the error. Variance parameter estimates from the individual PK analysis (ADAPT-II) were used as beginning estimates and were updated iteratively during the population PK analysis until stable values were found.
Statistical analysis.
Statistical analyses were performed using SAS version 9.1.3 for Windows. Elvucitabine PK parameters obtained after a single dose with and without ritonavir were compared using an analysis of variance (ANOVA) using the Proc Mixed procedure as implemented in SAS. An ANOVA was performed on the ln-transformed PK parameters AUC0-24, AUC0-t, AUC0-
, Cmax, clearance (CL/F), central volume of distribution (Vc/F), distributional clearance (CLd/F), peripheral volume of distribution (Vp/F), and volume of distribution (Vss/F) and included sequence, treatment, and period as fixed effects and subject nested within sequence as a random effect. Similarly, an ANOVA was performed on the PK parameters absorption rate constant (ka), t1/2, and lag time prior to the start of absorption. Tmax was compared using a Wilcoxon signed rank nonparametric analysis on paired data. Statistical significance was set a priori at P < 0.05.
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, Cmax, kel, and t1/2 were calculated for 20 mg elvucitabine administered alone or coadministered with ritonavir. Results are presented in Table 1. Based on AUC0-
results, coadministration of ritonavir reduced the exposure of elvucitabine by approximately 30% (90% confidence interval [CI], 61.7 to 83.3). Elvucitabine's Cmax was reduced by 40.3% (90% CI, 44.8 to 79.6). The t1/2 of approximately 60 h was more than likely underestimated due to the sampling scheme of 96 h. |
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TABLE 1. Noncompartmental elvucitabine (ELV) PK parameters in plasma
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TABLE 2. Discrimination criteria between PK modelsa
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FIG. 1. Final PK model used in the compartmental analysis.
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TABLE 3. Elvucitabine (ELV) PK parameters estimated using IT2S population compartmental analyses
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FIG. 2. Predicted (·) versus observed (-) concentrations of elvucitabine (20 mg) administered alone (A) or with ritonavir (B). Data are from a representative subject.
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FIG. 3. Predicted versus observed concentrations for elvucitabine (20 mg) administered alone (A) or with ritonavir (B).
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The residual variability left from the population analyses was low at approximately 9% for elvucitabine administered alone or with ritonavir. This suggests that the model chosen was appropriate. In addition, the predicted versus observed concentrations (Fig. 3) were close to the line of identity, and no trend was detected on the plot (absence of bias), which further demonstrates the validity of the model.
Comparing the noncompartmental and compartmental analyses can be useful in determining consistency between PK methods. Both methods provided similar clearance values for elvucitabine administered alone (17.8 versus 17.6 liters/h) and coadministered with ritonavir (29.2 versus 28.0). Results from the compartmental analysis indicate that ritonavir delayed the start of absorption of elvucitabine by 1 h and decreased one of its rates of absorption by nearly 40%. These results are in agreement with the observed 1.3 h shift in Tmax and lower Cmax of elvucitabine.
This in vivo drug-drug interaction study indicated a clinically significant PK interaction of ritonavir with elvucitabine. Elvucitabine's AUC0-
and Cmax decreased by 28.3% (61.7 to 83.3%) and 40.3% (44.8 to 79.6%), respectively, when it was coadministered with ritonavir. This clinically significant PK interaction with ritonavir appears to be due to a decrease in the bioavailability and not in a change in the elimination rate. As elvucitabine is not metabolized by CYP enzymes, any impact by ritonavir on the hepatic and intestinal CYP enzymes would be negligible. As elvucitabine is renally eliminated unchanged and the half-life for elvucitabine was not affected, it can be assumed that the elimination process (renal transporters) was not affected. Therefore, a plausible cause for the decrease in elvucitabine exposure by ritonavir would be an alteration in the activity of gut transporters. We can assume that some transporters other than the efflux ABCB1 are affected, as F decreased instead of increasing. This large dose of ritonavir (300 mg) therefore likely affected some influx gut transporters. Although the effect of ritonavir on influx transporters has not been reported to our knowledge, a closely related compound, saquinavir, is a substrate for OATP-A transporters (13). It is therefore possible that ritonavir may affect the activity of OATP transporters.
Conclusion. Elvucitabine PK behavior was well described by a linear two-compartment model with two first-order absorption rates and a first-order elimination rate.
Ritonavir significantly decreased the exposure of elvucitabine by decreasing its bioavailability. A probable cause for this decrease may be an inhibition of absorption influx transporters by ritonavir.
Published ahead of print on 17 November 2008. ![]()
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