Pharmacokinetic Drug-Drug Interactions with Drugs Approved by the US Food and Drug Administration in 2020: Mechanistic Understanding and Clinical Recommendations
药品
药代动力学
药理学
药物开发
药物代谢
医学
批准的药物
食品药品监督管理局
作者
Jingjing Yu,Yan Wang,Isabelle Ragueneau‐Majlessi
出处
期刊:Drug Metabolism and Disposition [American Society for Pharmacology & Experimental Therapeutics] 日期:2021-10-07卷期号:50 (1): 1-7被引量:29
Drug-drug interaction (DDI) data for small molecular drugs approved by the US Food and Drug Administration in 2020 (N = 40) were analyzed using the University of Washington Drug Interaction Database. The mechanism(s) and clinical relevance of these interactions were characterized based on information available in the new drug application reviews. About 180 positive clinical studies defined as mean area under the curve ratios (AUCRs) ≥1.25 for inhibition DDIs or pharmacogenetic studies and ≤0.8 for induction DDIs were then fully analyzed. Oncology was the most represented therapeutic area, including 30% of 2020 approvals. As victim drugs, inhibition and induction of CYP3A explained most of all observed clinical interactions. Three sensitive substrates were identified: avapritinib (CYP3A), lonafarnib (CYP3A), and relugolix (P-glycoprotein), with AUCRs of 7.00, 5.07, and 6.25 when coadministered with itraconazole, ketoconazole, and erythromycin, respectively. As precipitants, three drugs were considered strong inhibitors of enzymes (AUCR ≥ 5): cedazuridine for cytidine deaminase and lonafarnib and tucatinib for CYP3A. No drug showed strong inhibition of transporters. No strong inducer of enzymes or transporters was identified. As expected, all DDIs with AUCRs ≥5 or ≤0.2 and almost all those with AUCRs of 2-5 and 0.2-0.5 triggered dosing recommendations in the drug label. Overall, all 2020 drugs found to be either sensitive substrates or strong inhibitors of enzymes or transporters were oncology treatments, underscoring the need for effective DDI management strategies in patients with cancer often receiving polytherapy. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: This minireview provides a thorough and specific overview of the most significant pharmacokinetic-based DDI data observed (or expected) with small molecular drugs approved by the US Food and Drug Administration in 2020. It will help to better understand mitigation strategies to manage the DDI risks in the clinic.