학술논문

No Clinical Impact of CYP3A5 Gene Polymorphisms on the Pharmacokinetics and/or Efficacy of Maraviroc in Healthy Volunteers and HIV-1-Infected Subjects.
Document Type
Academic Journal
Author
Vourvahis M; Pfizer, Clinical Pharmacology, New York, NY, USA.; McFadyen L; Pfizer, Pharmacometrics, Sandwich, UK.; Nepal S; Pfizer, Biostatistics, Collegeville, PA, USA.; Valluri SR; Pfizer, Biostatistics, New York, NY, USA.; Fang A; Pfizer, Clinical Development, New York, NY, USA.; Fate GD; Pfizer, Pharmacokinetics and Drug Metabolism, Groton, CT, USA.; Wood LS; Pfizer, Clinical Pharmacogenomics, Groton, CT, USA.; Marshall JC; Pfizer, Clinical Pharmacogenomics, Groton, CT, USA.; Chan PLS; Pfizer, Pharmacometrics, Sandwich, UK.; Nedderman A; York Bioanalytical Solutions, Sandwich, UK.; Haynes J; York Bioanalytical Solutions, Sandwich, UK.; Savage ME; York Bioanalytical Solutions, Sandwich, UK.; Clark A; ViiV Healthcare, London, UK.; Smith KY; ViiV Healthcare, Research Triangle Park, NC, USA.; Heera J; Pfizer, Clinical Development, Groton, CT, USA.
Source
Publisher: Wiley Country of Publication: England NLM ID: 0366372 Publication Model: Print-Electronic Cited Medium: Internet ISSN: 1552-4604 (Electronic) Linking ISSN: 00912700 NLM ISO Abbreviation: J Clin Pharmacol Subsets: MEDLINE
Subject
Language
English
Abstract
Maraviroc is a C-C chemokine receptor type-5 antagonist approved for the treatment of HIV-1. Previous studies show that cytochrome P450 3A5 (CYP3A5) plays a role in maraviroc metabolism. CYP3A5 is subject to a genetic polymorphism. The presence of 2 functional alleles (CYP3A5*1/*1) confers the extensive metabolism phenotype, which is rare in whites but common in blacks. The effect of CYP3A5 genotype on maraviroc and/or metabolite pharmacokinetics was evaluated in 2 clinical studies: a post hoc analysis from a phase 2b/3 study (NCT00098293) conducted in 494 HIV-1-infected subjects (study 1) in which the impact on maraviroc efficacy in 303 subjects was also assessed, and a study conducted in 47 healthy volunteers (study 2). In study 2 (NCT02625207), extensive metabolizers had 26% to 37% lower mean area under the concentration-time curve compared with poor metabolizers (no CYP3A5*1 alleles). This effect diminished to 17% in the presence of potent CYP3A inhibition. The effect of CYP3A5 genotype was greatest in the formation of the metabolite (1S,2S)-2-hydroxymaraviroc. In study 1, the CYP3A5*1/*1 genotype unexpectedly had higher maraviroc area under the curve predictions (20%) compared with those with no CYP3A5*1 alleles. The reason for this disparity remains unclear. The proportions of subjects with viral loads <50 and <400 copies/mL for maraviroc were comparable among all 3 CYP3A5 genotypes. In both studies maraviroc exposures were in the range of near-maximal viral inhibition in the majority of subjects. These results demonstrate that although CYP3A5 contributes to the metabolism of maraviroc, CYP3A5 genotype does not affect the clinical response to maraviroc in combination treatment of HIV-1 infection at approved doses.
(© 2018, The Authors. The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of American College of Clinical Pharmacology.)