Jing Li, Charuka Wickramasinghe, Jun Jiang, Andrew Wu, Yuanyuan Jiang, Artak Tovmasyan, Seongho Kim, Nader Sanai
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Direct measurement of spatial-temporal drug penetration and exposure in the human central nervous system (CNS) and brain tumors is difficult or infeasible. This study aimed to develop an innovative mechanistic modeling platform for quantitative prediction of spatial pharmacokinetics of systemically administered drugs in the human CNS and brain tumors. A nine-compartment CNS (9-CNS) physiologically-based pharmacokinetic model was developed to account for general anatomical structure and pathophysiological heterogeneity of the human CNS and brain tumors. Drug distribution into and within the CNS and tumors is driven by plasma concentration-time profiles and governed by drug properties and CNS pathophysiology. The model was validated by comparisons of model predictions and clinically observed data of six drugs (abemaciclib, ribociclib, pamiparib, olaparib, temuterkib, and ceritinib) in glioblastoma patients. As rigorously validated, the 9-CNS model allows reliable prediction of spatial pharmacokinetics in different regions of the brain parenchyma (i.e., parenchyma adjacent to CSF and deep parenchyma), tumors (i.e., tumor rim, bulk tumor, and tumor core), and CSF (i.e., ventricular CSF, cranial and spinal subarachnoid CSF). By considering inter-individual plasma pharmacokinetic variability and CNS/tumor heterogeneity, the model well predicts the inter-individual variability and spatial heterogeneity of drug exposure in the CNS and tumors as observed for all six drugs in glioblastoma patients. The 9-CNS model is a first-of-its kind, mechanism-based computational modeling platform that enables early reliable prediction of spatial CNS and tumor pharmacokinetics based on plasma concentration-time profiles. It provides a valuable tool to assist rational drug development and treatment for brain cancer.
期刊介绍:
Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics (CPT) is the authoritative cross-disciplinary journal in experimental and clinical medicine devoted to publishing advances in the nature, action, efficacy, and evaluation of therapeutics. CPT welcomes original Articles in the emerging areas of translational, predictive and personalized medicine; new therapeutic modalities including gene and cell therapies; pharmacogenomics, proteomics and metabolomics; bioinformation and applied systems biology complementing areas of pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, human investigation and clinical trials, pharmacovigilence, pharmacoepidemiology, pharmacometrics, and population pharmacology.