ABSTRACT:Mycophenolic acid (MPA), the active metabolite of the immunosuppressant mycophenolate mofetil is primarily metabolized by glucuronidation. The nature of UDP-glucuronosyltransferases (UGTs) involved in this pathway is still debated. The present study aimed at identifying unambiguously the UGT isoforms involved in the production of MPA-phenyl-glucuronide (MPAG) and MPA-acylglucuronide (AcMPAG). A liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry method allowing the identification and determination of the metabolites of mycophenolic acid was developed. The metabolites were characterized in urine and plasma samples from renal transplant patients under mycophenolate mofetil therapy and in vitro after incubation of mycophenolic acid with human liver (HLM), kidney (HKM), or intestinal microsomes (HIM). The UGT isoforms involved in MPAG or AcMPAG production were investigated using induced rat liver microsomes, heterologously expressed UGT (Supersomes), and chemical-selective inhibition of HLM, HKM, and HIM. The three microsomal preparations produced MPAG, AcMPAG, and two mycophenolate glucosides. Among the 10 UGT isoforms tested, UGT 1A9 was the most efficient for MPAG synthesis with a K m of 0.16 mM, close to that observed for HLM (0.18 mM). According to the chemical inhibition experiments, UGT 1A9 is apparently responsible for 55%, 75%, and 50% of MPAG production by the liver, kidney, and intestinal mucosa, respectively. Although UGT 2B7 was the only isoform producing AcMPAG in a significant amount, the selective inhibitor azidothymidine only moderately reduced this production (approximately ؊25%). In conclusion, UGT 1A9 and 2B7 were clearly identified as the main UGT isoforms involved in mycophenolic acid glucuronidation, presumably due to their high hepatic and renal expression.
Population pharmacokinetic analysis of tacrolimus in renal transplant recipients showed a significant influence of the haematocrit on its CL/F and led to the development of a Bayesian estimator compatible with clinical practice and able to accurately predict tacrolimus individual pharmacokinetic parameters and the AUC(12).
Mycophenolic acid (MPA) is an immunosuppressive drug widely used in the prevention of acute rejection in pediatric renal transplant recipients and is characterized by a wide inter-individual variability in its pharmacokinetics. The aim of this study was to compare population pharmacokinetic modeling of MPA in pediatric renal transplant recipients given mycophenolate mofetil, the ester prodrug of MPA, using parametric and nonparametric population methods. The data from 34 pediatric renal transplants (73 full pharmacokinetic profiles obtained on day 21, months 3, 6 and 9 post-transplant) were analyzed using both the nonlinear mixed-effect modeling (NONMEM) and nonparametric adaptive grid (NPAG) approaches, based on a two-compartment model with first order lagged time absorption and first order elimination. The predictive performance of the two models was evaluated in a separate group of 32 patients. Higher mean population parameter values and ranges of individual pharmacokinetic parameters were obtained with NPAG, especially for the elimination constant ke: mean 1.16 h(-1) (0.26-4.33 h(-1)) and 0.78 h(-1) (0.66-1.15 h(-1)) with NPAG and NONMEM, respectively. With NPAG, the skewness and kurtosis values for ke (2.03 and 7.80, respectively) were far from the theoretical values expected for normal distributions. Such a non-normal distribution could explain the high value of shrinkage (35%) obtained for this parameter with the parametric NONMEM method. Bayesian forecasting of mycophenolic acid exposure using the NPAG population pharmacokinetic parameters as priors yielded a better predictive performance, with a significantly smaller bias than with the NONMEM model (-1.68% vs -9.53%, p<0.0001). In conclusion, in the present study, NPAG was found to be the most adequate population pharmacokinetic method to describe the pharmacokinetics of MPA in pediatric renal transplant recipients.
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