Oral coadministration of elacridar and ritonavir enhances brain accumulation and oral availability of the novel ALK/ROS1 inhibitor lorlatinib

Publication date

2019-03-01

Authors

Li, WenlongISNI 000000052404497X
Sparidans, Rolf W.ISNI 0000000357085984
Wang, Yaogeng
Lebre, Maria C.
Beijnen, JosISNI 0000000140305595
Schinkel, Alfred H.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

Lorlatinib, a novel generation oral anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) and ROS1 inhibitor with high membrane and blood-brain barrier permeability, recently received accelerated approval for treatment of ALK-rearranged non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), and its further clinical development is ongoing. We previously found that the efflux transporter P-glycoprotein (MDR1/ABCB1) restricts lorlatinib brain accumulation and that the drug-metabolizing enzyme cytochrome P450-3A (CYP3A) limits its oral availability. Using genetically modified mouse models, we investigated the impact of targeted pharmacological inhibitors on lorlatinib pharmacokinetics and bioavailability. Upon oral administration of lorlatinib, the plasma AUC0-8h in CYP3A4-humanized mice was ∼1.8-fold lower than in wild-type and Cyp3a–/– mice. Oral coadministration of the CYP3A inhibitor ritonavir caused reversion to the AUC0-8h levels seen in wild-type and Cyp3a–/– mice, without altering the relative tissue distribution of lorlatinib. Moreover, simultaneous pharmacological inhibition of P-glycoprotein and CYP3A4 with oral elacridar and ritonavir in CYP3A4-humanized mice profoundly increased lorlatinib brain concentrations, but not its oral availability or other relative tissue distribution. Oral lorlatinib pharmacokinetics was not significantly affected by absence of the multispecific Oatp1a/1b drug uptake transporters. The absolute oral bioavailability of lorlatinib over 8 h in wild-type, Cyp3a–/–, and CYP3A4-humanized mice was 81.6%, 72.9%, and 58.5%, respectively. Lorlatinib thus has good oral bioavailability, which is markedly restricted by human CYP3A4 but not by mouse Cyp3a. Pharmacological inhibition of CYP3A4 reversed these effects, and simultaneous P-gp inhibition with elacridar boosted absolute brain levels of lorlatinib by 16-fold without obvious toxicity. These insights may help to optimize the clinical application of lorlatinib.

Keywords

Cytochrome P450-3A, Lorlatinib, Oatp1a/1b, Oral bioavailability, P-glycoprotein, Ritonavir, Taverne, Biotechnology, Pharmaceutical Science, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Li, W, Sparidans, R W, Wang, Y, Lebre, M C, Beijnen, J H & Schinkel, A H 2019, 'Oral coadministration of elacridar and ritonavir enhances brain accumulation and oral availability of the novel ALK/ROS1 inhibitor lorlatinib', European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics, vol. 136, pp. 120-130. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejpb.2019.01.016