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Metabolism and Disposition of Oral Dabrafenib in Cancer Patients: Proposed Participation of Aryl Nitrogen in Carbon-Carbon Bond Cleavage via Decarboxylation following Enzymatic Oxidation

Authors :
Dana Knecht
Samuel C. Blackman
Kristen E Jurusik
Lauren E. Richards-Peterson
Peter D. Gorycki
Jerry L. Adams
Donna Mamaril-Fishman
David A. Bershas
Noelia Nebot
Royce A. Morrison
Stanley W. Carson
Daniele Ouellet
Source :
Drug Metabolism and Disposition. 41:2215-2224
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
American Society for Pharmacology & Experimental Therapeutics (ASPET), 2013.

Abstract

A phase I study was conducted to assess the metabolism and excretion of [(14)C]dabrafenib (GSK2118436; N-{3-[5-(2-amino-4-pyrimidinyl)-2-(1,1-dimethylethyl)-1,3-thiazol-4-yl]-2-fluorophenyl}-2,6-difluorobenzene sulfonamide, methanesulfonate salt), a BRAF inhibitor, in four patients with BRAF V600 mutation-positive tumors after a single oral dose of 95 mg (80 µCi). Assessments included the following: 1) plasma concentrations of dabrafenib and metabolites using validated ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography--tandem mass spectrometry methods, 2) plasma and blood radioactivity, 3) urinary and fecal radioactivity, and 4) metabolite profiling. Results showed the mean total recovery of radioactivity was 93.8%, with the majority recovered in feces (71.1% of administered dose). Urinary excretion accounted for 22.7% of the dose, with no detection of parent drug in urine. Dabrafenib is metabolized primarily via oxidation of the t-butyl group to form hydroxy-dabrafenib. Hydroxy-dabrafenib undergoes further oxidation to carboxy-dabrafenib, which subsequently converts to desmethyl-dabrafenib via a pH-dependent decarboxylation. The half-lives for carboxy- and desmethyl-dabrafenib were longer than for parent and hydroxy-dabrafenib (18-20 vs. 5-6 hours). Based on area under the plasma concentration-time curve, dabrafenib, hydroxy-, carboxy-, and desmethyl-dabrafenib accounted for 11%, 8%, 54%, and 3% of the plasma radioactivity, respectively. These results demonstrate that the major route of elimination of dabrafenib is via oxidative metabolism (48% of the dose) and biliary excretion. Based on our understanding of the decarboxylation of carboxy-dabrafenib, a low pH-driven, nonenzymatic mechanism involving participation of the aryl nitrogen is proposed to allow prediction of metabolic oxidation and decarboxylation of drugs containing an aryl nitrogen positioned α to an alkyl (ethyl or t-butyl) side chain.

Details

ISSN :
1521009X and 00909556
Volume :
41
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Drug Metabolism and Disposition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....20c9d2e4a5b1542ed07fbedd81036ccb
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1124/dmd.113.053785