Metabolism of Fostamatinib, the Oral Methylene Phosphate Prodrug of the Spleen Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor R406 in Humans: Contribution of Hepatic and Gut Bacterial Processes to the Overall Biotransformation

Autor: Sweeny, David J., Li, Weiqun, Clough, Jeffrey, Bhamidipati, Somasekhar, Singh, Rajinder, Park, Gary, Baluom, Muhammad, Grossbard, Elliott, Lau, David T.-W.
Zdroj: Drug Metabolism and Disposition; July 2010, Vol. 38 Issue: 7 p1166-1176, 11p
Abstrakt: The metabolism of the spleen tyrosine kinase inhibitor N4-(2,2-dimethyl-3-oxo-4-pyrid[1,4]oxazin-6-yl)-5-fluoro-N2-(3,4,5-trimethyoxyphenyl)-2,4-pyrimidinediamine (R406) and its oral prodrug N4-(2,2-dimethyl-4-[(dihydrogenphosphonoxy)methyl]-3-oxo-5-pyrid[1,4]oxazin-6-yl)-5-fluoro-N2-(3,4,5-trimethyoxyphenyl)-2,4-pyrimidinediamine disodium hexahydrate (R788, fostamatinib) was determined in vitro and in humans. R788 was rapidly converted to R406 by human intestinal microsomes, and only low levels of R788 were observed in plasma of human subjects after oral administration of 14C-R788. R406 was the major drug-related compound in plasma from human subjects, and only low levels of metabolites were observed in plasma. The plasma metabolites of R406 were identified as a sulfate conjugate and glucuronide conjugate of the para-O-demethylated metabolite of R406 (R529) and a direct N-glucuronide conjugate of R406. Elimination of drug-related material into the urine accounted for 19% of the administered dose, and the major metabolite in urine from all the human subjects was the lactam N-glucuronide of R406. On average, 80% of the total drug was recovered in feces. Two drug-related peaks were observed; one peak was identified as R406, and the other peak was identified as a unique 3,5-benzene diol metabolite of R406. The 3,5-benzene diol metabolite appeared to result from the subsequent O-demethylations and dehydroxylation of R529 by anaerobic gut bacteria because only R529 was converted to this metabolite after the in vitro incubation with human fecal samples. These data indicate that the major fecal metabolite of R406 observed in humans is a product of a hepatic cytochrome P450-mediated O-demethylation and subsequent O-demethylations and dehydroxylation by gut bacteria.
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