Pharmacokinetics, absorption, metabolism, and excretion of [(14)C]ivosidenib (AG-120) in healthy male subjects.

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Citation

Prakash C, Fan B, Altaf S, Agresta S, Liu H, Yang H

Pharmacokinetics, absorption, metabolism, and excretion of [(14)C]ivosidenib (AG-120) in healthy male subjects.

Cancer Chemother Pharmacol. 2019 May;83(5):837-848. doi: 10.1007/s00280-019-03793-7. Epub 2019 Feb 13.

PubMed ID
30758648 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

PURPOSE: Pharmacokinetics, absorption, metabolism, and excretion of ivosidenib, a mutant isocitrate dehydrogenase-1 inhibitor, were determined in healthy male subjects. METHODS: In this open-label phase I study, a single dose of [(14)C]ivosidenib (500 mg, 200 microCi/subject) was orally administered to eight subjects (CYP2D6 extensive, intermediate, or poor metabolizers) under fasted conditions. Blood, plasma, urine, and fecal samples were assayed for radioactivity and profiled for metabolites. Ivosidenib plasma concentrations were determined using LC-MS/MS. Metabolites were separated using reverse-phase HPLC and analyzed using high-resolution LC-MS and LC-MS/MS. RESULTS: Ivosidenib was readily absorbed and slowly eliminated from plasma. Median Tmax of both unchanged ivosidenib and radioactivity in plasma was 4 h. Plasma t(1/2) values for total radioactivity and ivosidenib were 71.7 and 53.4 h, respectively. The mean AUC0-72 blood-to-plasma total radioactivity concentration ratio was 0.565, indicating minimal partitioning to red blood cells. CYP2D6 genotype had no effect on ivosidenib exposure. The mean recovery of radioactivity in excreta was 94.3% over 360 h post-dose; the majority was excreted in feces (77.4 +/- 9.62%) with a low percentage recovered in urine (16.9 +/- 5.62%), suggesting fecal excretion is the primary route of elimination. Unchanged [(14)C]ivosidenib accounted for 67.4% of the administered radioactivity in feces. Only [(14)C]ivosidenib was detected in plasma, representing 92.4% of the total plasma radioactivity. Thirteen metabolites were structurally identified in excreta. CONCLUSION: Ivosidenib was well-absorbed, slowly metabolized to multiple oxidative metabolites, and eliminated by fecal excretion, with no CYP2D6 effect observed. Unchanged ivosidenib was the only circulating species in plasma.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Drugs
Drug Enzymes
DrugEnzymeKindOrganismPharmacological ActionActions
IvosidenibCytochrome P450 3A4ProteinHumans
Unknown
Substrate
Inducer
Details
Drug Reactions
Reaction
Details
Details