Abstract:Pharmacokinetic characterization plays a vital role in drug discovery and development. Although involving numerous laboratory animals with error-prone, labor-intensive, and time-consuming procedures, pharmacokinetic profiling is still irreplaceable in preclinical studies. With physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling, the in vivo profiles of drug absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion can be predicted. To evaluate the application of such an approach in preclinical investigations, the … Show more
In silico techniques, such as physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling (PBKP), are recently gaining importance. Computational methods in drug discovery and development and the generic drugs industry enhance research effectiveness by saving time and money and avoiding ethical issues. One key advantage is the ability to conduct toxicology studies without risking harm to living beings. This study aimed to repurpose the multi‐phase multi‐layer mechanistic dermal absorption (MPML MechDermA) PBPK model for simulation permeation through porcine ear skin under in vitro conditions. The work was divided into four steps: (1) the development of a pig ear skin model based on a previously collected dataset; (2) testing the model's ability to discriminate permeation between pig ear, human abdomen, and human back skin; (3) development of a caffeine permeation model; and (4) testing the caffeine model's performance against in vitro generated data sourced from the scientific literature. Data from 31 manuscripts were used for the development of the pig skin model. Based on these data, values specific to pig skin were found for 22 parameters of the MPML MechDermA model. The model was able to discriminate permeation between pig and human skin. A caffeine model was developed and used to simulate seven experiments identified in the literature. The model's performance was assessed by comparing simulated to observed results. Based on a visual check, all simulations were considered acceptable, whereas three out of seven experiments met the twofold difference criterion. The variability of the experimental data was considered the biggest challenge for reliable model assessment.
In silico techniques, such as physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling (PBKP), are recently gaining importance. Computational methods in drug discovery and development and the generic drugs industry enhance research effectiveness by saving time and money and avoiding ethical issues. One key advantage is the ability to conduct toxicology studies without risking harm to living beings. This study aimed to repurpose the multi‐phase multi‐layer mechanistic dermal absorption (MPML MechDermA) PBPK model for simulation permeation through porcine ear skin under in vitro conditions. The work was divided into four steps: (1) the development of a pig ear skin model based on a previously collected dataset; (2) testing the model's ability to discriminate permeation between pig ear, human abdomen, and human back skin; (3) development of a caffeine permeation model; and (4) testing the caffeine model's performance against in vitro generated data sourced from the scientific literature. Data from 31 manuscripts were used for the development of the pig skin model. Based on these data, values specific to pig skin were found for 22 parameters of the MPML MechDermA model. The model was able to discriminate permeation between pig and human skin. A caffeine model was developed and used to simulate seven experiments identified in the literature. The model's performance was assessed by comparing simulated to observed results. Based on a visual check, all simulations were considered acceptable, whereas three out of seven experiments met the twofold difference criterion. The variability of the experimental data was considered the biggest challenge for reliable model assessment.
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