Characterization and prediction of OATP1B activity in prostate cancer patients on abiraterone acetate using endogenous biomarker coproporphyrin I.
Ziteng WangKylie Hoi Yan LukEleanor Jing Yi CheongSin Mun ThamRevathi PeriaswamiPoh Choo TohZiting WangQing Hui WuWoon Chau TsangArshvin KesavanAlvin Seng Cheong WongPatrick Thomas WongFelicia LimEdmund ChiongEric Chun Yong ChanPublished in: Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals (2024)
Organic anion transporting polypeptide (OATP) 1B1 and OATP1B3 are important hepatic transporters. We previously identified OATP1B3 being critically implicated in the disposition of abiraterone. We aimed to further investigate the effects of abiraterone on the activities of OATP1B1 and OATP1B3 utilizing a validated endogenous biomarker coproporphyrin I (CP-I). We utilized OATP1B-transfected cells to characterize the inhibitory potential of abiraterone against OATP1B-mediated uptake of CP-I. Inhibition constant (Ki) was incorporated into our physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling to simulate the systemic exposures of CP-I among cancer populations receiving either our model-informed 500 mg or clinically approved 1000 mg abiraterone acetate (AA) dosage. Simulated data were compared with clinical CP-I concentrations determined among our 9 metastatic prostate cancer patients receiving 500 mg AA treatment. Abiraterone inhibited OATP1B3- but not OATP1B1-mediated uptake of CP-I in vitro, with an estimated Ki of 3.93 µM. Baseline CP-I concentrations were simulated to be 0.81 {plus minus} 0.26 ng/mL, and determined to be 0.72 {plus minus} 0.16 ng/mL among metastatic prostate cancer patients, both of which were higher than those observed for healthy subjects. PBPK simulations revealed an absence of OATP1B3-mediated interaction between abiraterone and CP-I. Our clinical observations confirmed that CP-I concentrations remained comparable to baseline levels up to 12 weeks post 500 mg AA treatment. Using CP-I as an endogenous biomarker, we identified the inhibition of abiraterone on OATP1B3 but not OATP1B1 in vitro, which was predicted and observed to be clinically insignificant. We concluded that the interaction risk between AA and substrates of OATP1Bs is low. Significance Statement We utilized the endogenous biomarker coproporphyrin I (CP-I) and identified abiraterone as a moderate inhibitor of organic anion transporting polypeptide (OATP) 1B3 in vitro. Subsequent physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) simulations and clinical observations suggested an absence of OATP1B-mediated interaction between abiraterone and CP-I among prostate cancer patients. This multi-pronged study concluded that the interaction risk between abiraterone acetate and substrates of OATP1Bs is low, demonstrating the application of PBPK-CP-I modelling in predicting OATP1B-mediated interaction implicating abiraterone.