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Evaluation of Safety and Clinically Relevant Drug–Drug Interactions with Tucatinib in Healthy Volunteers

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Tucatinib is approved for treatment of human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-positive metastatic breast cancer. Understanding potential drug–drug interactions (DDIs) informs proper dosing when co-administering tucatinib with other therapies. The aim of this study was to...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Topletz-Erickson, Ariel, Lee, Anthony, Rustia, Evelyn L., Sun, Hao, Mayor, JoAl G., Abdulrasool, Layth I., Walker, Luke, Endres, Christopher J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer International Publishing 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9553805/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35931943
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40262-022-01144-z
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Tucatinib is approved for treatment of human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-positive metastatic breast cancer. Understanding potential drug–drug interactions (DDIs) informs proper dosing when co-administering tucatinib with other therapies. The aim of this study was to evaluate DDIs between tucatinib and metabolizing enzymes and transporters in healthy volunteers. METHODS: Parts A–C assessed the impact of itraconazole (cytochrome P450 [CYP] 3A4 inhibitor), rifampin (CYP3A4/CYP2C8 inducer), or gemfibrozil (CYP2C8 inhibitor) on the pharmacokinetics of a single 300 mg dose of tucatinib administered orally and its primary metabolite, ONT-993. Parts D and E assessed the effect of steady-state tucatinib on the pharmacokinetics of repaglinide (CYP2C8 substrate), tolbutamide (CYP2C9 substrate), midazolam (CYP3A4 substrate), and digoxin (P-glycoprotein substrate). RESULTS: Tucatinib area under the concentration–time curve from time 0 extrapolated to infinity (AUC(0–inf)) increased by ~ 1.3- and 3.0-fold with itraconazole and gemfibrozil, respectively, and decreased by 48% with rifampin, indicating that tucatinib is metabolized primarily by CYP2C8, and to a lesser extent via CYP3A. Tucatinib was a strong inhibitor of CYP3A (midazolam AUC(0–inf) increased 5.7-fold), a weak inhibitor of CYP2C8 and P-glycoprotein, and had no impact on CYP2C9-mediated metabolism in humans. Tucatinib was well tolerated, alone and with co-administered drugs. CONCLUSION: The potential DDIs identified here may be mitigated by avoiding concomitant use of tucatinib with strong CYP3A inducers, moderate CYP2C8 inducers, CYP3A substrates with a narrow therapeutic window (modifying substrate dose where concomitant use is unavoidable), and strong CYP2C8 inhibitors (decreasing tucatinib dose where concomitant use is unavoidable), or by reducing the dose of P-glycoprotein substrates with a narrow therapeutic window. TRIAL REGISTRATION: This trial (NCT03723395) was registered on October 29, 2018. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s40262-022-01144-z.