Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.14573/altex.1812051
Title: Bottom-up physiologically-based biokinetic modelling as an alternative to animal testing.
Authors: CHAN, JAMES CY
TAN, SHAWN PF
UPTON, ZEE
CHAN, ERIC CY 
Issue Date: 10-May-2019
Citation: CHAN, JAMES CY, TAN, SHAWN PF, UPTON, ZEE, CHAN, ERIC CY (2019-05-10). Bottom-up physiologically-based biokinetic modelling as an alternative to animal testing.. ALTEX. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.14573/altex.1812051
Abstract: There is a growing need for alternatives to animal testing to derive biokinetic data for evaluating both efficacy and safety of chemicals. One such alternative is bottom-up physiologically-based biokinetic (PBK) modeling which requires only in vitro data. The primary objective of this study is to develop and validate bottom-up PBK models of 3 HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors: rosuvastatin, fluvastatin and pitavastatin. Bottom-up PBK models were built using the Simcyp® Simulator by incorporating in vitro transporter and metabolism data (Vmax, Jmax, Km, CLint) obtained from the literature and proteomics-based scaling factors to account for differences in transporters expression between in vitro systems and in vivo organs. Simulations were performed for single intravenous, single oral and multiple oral dose of these chemicals. The results showed that our bottom-up models predicted systemic exposure (AUC0h-t), maximum plasma concentration (Cmax), plasma clearance and time to reach Cmax (Tmax) within two-fold of the observed data, with the exception of parameters associated with multiple oral pitavastatin dosing and single oral fluvastatin dosing. Additional middle-out simulations were performed using animal distribution data to inform tissue-to-plasma equilibrium distribution ratios for rosuvastatin and pitavastatin. This improved the predicted plasma-concentration time profiles but did not significantly alter the predicted biokinetic parameters. Our study demonstrates that quantitative proteomics-based mechanistic in vitro-to-in vivo extrapolation (IVIVE) could account for downregulation of transporters in culture and predict whole organ clearances without empirical scaling. Hence, bottom-up PBK modeling incorporating mechanistic IVIVE could be a viable alternative to animal testing in predicting human biokinetics.
Source Title: ALTEX
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/155371
ISSN: 1868-596X
DOI: 10.14573/altex.1812051
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