%0 Journal Article %A Sara Shum %A Danny D. Shen %A Nina Isoherranen %T Predicting maternal-fetal disposition of fentanyl following intravenous and epidural administration using physiologically-based pharmacokinetic modeling %D 2021 %R 10.1124/dmd.121.000612 %J Drug Metabolism and Disposition %P DMD-AR-2021-000612 %X Fentanyl is an opioid analgesic used to treat obstetrical pain in parturient women through epidural or intravenous route, and unfortunately can also be abused by pregnant women. Fentanyl is known to cross the placental barrier, but how the route of administration and time after dosing affects maternal-fetal disposition kinetics at different stages of pregnancy is not well characterized. To address this knowledge gap, we developed a maternal-fetal physiologically based pharmacokinetic (mf-PBPK) model for fentanyl to evaluate the feasibility to predict the maternal and fetal plasma concentration-time profiles of fentanyl following various dosing regimens. As fentanyl is typically given via the epidural route to control labor pain, an epidural dosing site was developed using alfentanil as a reference drug and extrapolated to fentanyl. Fetal hepatic clearance of fentanyl was predicted from CYP3A7 mediated norfentanyl formation in fetal liver microsomes (CLint = 0.20 {plus minus} 0.05 µL/min/mg protein). The developed mf-PBPK model successfully captured fentanyl maternal and umbilical cord concentrations following epidural dosing and was used to simulate the concentrations following IV dosing (in a drug abuse situation). The distribution kinetics of fentanyl were found to have a considerable impact on the time course of maternal:umbilical cord concentration ratio and on interpretation of observed data. The data show that mf-PBPK modeling can be used successfully to predict maternal disposition, transplacental distribution, and fetal exposure to fentanyl. Significance Statement This study establishes the modeling framework for predicting the time course of maternal and fetal exposures of fentanyl opioids from mf-PBPK modeling. The model was validated based on fentanyl exposure data collected during labor and delivery following IV or epidural dosing. The results show that mf-PBPK modeling is a useful predictive tool for assessing fetal exposures to fentanyl opioid therapeutic regimens and potentially can be extended to other drugs of abuse. %U https://dmd.aspetjournals.org/content/dmd/early/2021/08/18/dmd.121.000612.full.pdf