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Using the Dynamic Well-stirred Model to Extrapolate Hepatic Clearance of OATP Substrates without Assuming Albumin-Mediated Hepatic Drug Uptake.

Extrapolating in vivo hepatic clearance from in vitro uptake data is a known challenge, especially for OATP substrates, and the well-stirred model (WSM) commonly yields systematic under-predictions for those anionic drugs hypothetically due to "albumin-mediated hepatic drug uptake". In the present study, we demonstrate that the WSM incorporating the dynamic free fraction ( f D ), a measure of drug protein binding affinity, performs reasonably well in predicting hepatic clearance of OATP substrates. For a selection of anionic drugs including atorvastatin, fluvastatin, pravastatin, rosuvastatin, pitavastatin, cerivastatin, and repaglinide, this dynamic well-stirred model (dWSM) correctly predicts hepatic plasma clearance within 2-fold error for six out of seven OATP substrates examined. The geometric mean of clearance ratios between the predicted and the observed values falls in the range of 1.21-1.38. As expected, the WSM with unbound fraction ( f u ) systematically under-predicts hepatic clearance with greater than 2-fold error for five out of seven drugs, and the geometric mean of clearance ratios between the predicted and the observed values is in the range of 0.20-0.29. The results suggest that, despite its simplicity, the dWSM operates well for transporter-mediated uptake clearance, and that clearance under-prediction of OATP substrates may not necessarily be associated with the chemical class of the anionic drugs, nor is it a result of albumin-mediated hepatic drug uptake as currently hypothesized. Instead, the superior prediction power of the dWSM confirms the utility of the dynamic free fraction in clearance prediction and the importance of drug plasma binding kinetics in hepatic uptake clearance. Significance Statement The traditional well-stirred model (WSM) consistently under predicts OATP-mediated hepatic uptake clearance, hypothetically due to the albumin-mediated hepatic drug uptake. In this manuscript, we apply the dynamic well-stirred model (dWSM) to extrapolate hepatic clearance of the OATP substrates, and our results show significant improvements in clearance prediction without assuming "albumin-mediated hepatic drug uptake".

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