Abstract
Icenticaftor (QBW251) is a potentiator of the CFTR protein and is currently in clinical development for the treatment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and chronic bronchitis. An absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME) study was performed at steady state to determine the pharmacokinetics, mass balance, and metabolite profiles of icenticaftor in humans. In this open-label study, six healthy men were treated with unlabeled oral icenticaftor (400 mg b.i.d.) for 4 days. A single oral dose of [14C]icenticaftor was administered on Day 5, and unlabeled icenticaftor was administered b.i.d. from the evening of Day 5 to Day 12. Unchanged icenticaftor accounted for 18.5% of plasma radioactivity. Moderate to rapid absorption of icenticaftor was observed (median Tmax: 4 hours), with 93.4% of the dose absorbed. It exhibited moderate distribution (Vz/F: 335 L) and was extensively metabolized, principally through N-glucuronidation, O-glucuronidation, and/or O-demethylation. The metabolites M8 and M9, formed by N-glucuronidation and O-glucuronidation of icenticaftor, respectively, represented the main entities detected in plasma (35.3% and 14.5%, respectively) in addition to unchanged icenticaftor (18.5%). The apparent mean T1/2 of icenticaftor was 15.4 hours in blood and 20.6 hours in plasma. Icenticaftor was eliminated from the body mainly through metabolism followed by renal excretion, and excretion of radioactivity was complete after 9 days. In vitro phenotyping of icenticaftor showed that cytochrome P450 and uridine diphosphate glucuronosyltransferase were responsible for 31% and 69% of the total icenticaftor metabolism in human liver microsomes, respectively. This study provided invaluable insights into the disposition of icenticaftor.
Significance Statement The ADME of a single radioactive oral dose of icenticaftor was evaluated at steady state to investigate the nonlinear pharmacokinetics observed previously with icenticaftor. [14C]Icenticaftor demonstrated good systemic availability after oral administration and was extensively metabolized and moderately distributed to peripheral tissues. The most abundant metabolites, M8 and M9, were formed by N-glucuronidation and O-glucuronidation of icenticaftor, respectively. Phenotyping demonstrated that [14C]icenticaftor was metabolized predominantly by UGT1A9 with a remarkably low Km value.