Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2478771 | Drug Metabolism and Pharmacokinetics | 2014 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Telaprevir-based triple therapy is a highly effective treatment for chronic hepatitis C. However, adverse reactions include reversible and dose-dependent elevation of serum creatinine levels. We speculated that this effect reflects inhibition of the renal organic cation transporters hOCT2, hMATE1, and hMATE2-K by telaprevir or its metabolites (VRT-127394 and VRT-0922061). Telaprevir, VRT-127394, and VRT-0922061 showed negligible or weak effects on hOCT2 at concentrations of â¥Â 20 μÎ, but inhibited hMATE1 by 35, 38, and 53% and hMATE2-K by 47, 45, and 61% at 100 μÎ, respectively. Telaprevir or its metabolites (10 μÎ) did not affect basal-to-apical transport of MPP + across monolayers of hOCT2-hMATE1 double-transfected MDCKII cells, whereas pyrimethamine, a potent inhibitor of hMATE1, markedly inhibited MPP + transport. Taken together, inhibition of hOCT2, hMATE1, and hMATE2-K is unlikely to be clinically relevant because unbound plasma concentrations of telaprevir and its metabolites reach only 2 μΠfollowing oral administration of a dose of 750mg telaprevir. Hence, elevated serum creatinine during telaprevir therapy may not be related to direct inhibition of renal organic cation transporters.
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Authors
Tomohisa Nakada, Tomoko Kito, Katsuhisa Inoue, Satohiro Masuda, Ken-ichi Inui, Kazuo Matsubara, Yoshinori Moriyama, Noriko Hisanaga, Yasuhisa Adachi, Masayuki Suzuki, Ichimaro Yamada, Hiroyuki Kusuhara,