A physiologically-based pharmacokinetic model of clopidogrel in
populations of European and Japanese ancestry: an evaluation of CYP2C19
activity
Abstract
Aims CYP2C19 activity is associated with treatment response to
clopidogrel through the formation of the active H4 metabolite. The aims
of this study were to develop a physiologically-based pharmacokinetic
(PBPK) model of clopidogrel and its metabolites for populations of
European ancestry, to predict pharmacokinetics in the Japanese
population by CYP2C19 phenotype (extensive metaboliser, EM; intermediate
metaboliser, IM; poor metaboliser, PM), and to investigate the effect of
clinical and demographic factors. Methods A PBPK model (Simcyp® v18.2)
was developed and verified (2-fold acceptance criteria) to describe the
two metabolic pathways of clopidogrel (H4 metabolite, acyl glucuronide
metabolite) for a population of European ancestry using plasma data from
four published studies. Subsequently, model predictions in the Japanese
population (2 studies) were evaluated. The effects of CYP2C19 activity,
fluvoxamine coadministration (CYP2C19 inhibitor) and population-specific
factors (age, sex, BMI, body weight, cancer, hepatic and renal
dysfunction) on the pharmacokinetics of clopidogrel and its metabolites
were investigated. Results The predicted/observed ratios for clopidogrel
and metabolite exposure parameters were acceptable. For all CYP2C19
phenotypes, steady-state AUC0-τ of the H4 metabolite was
lower for the Japanese (e.g. EM, 7.69 [6.26 – 9.45] ng·h/mL;
geometric mean [95% CI]) than European (EM, 24.8 [20.4 – 30.1]
ng·h/mL, P <0.001) population. CYP2C19 PM phenotype,
fluvoxamine co-administration, hepatic and renal dysfunction reduced H4
metabolite but not acyl glucuronide metabolite concentrations.
Conclusion This is the first PBPK model developed to describe the two
major metabolic pathways of clopidogrel which can be applied to
populations of European and Japanese ancestry by CYP2C19 phenotype.