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Method Article
Ivacaftor and ivacaftor-lumacaftor combination are two new CF drugs. However, there is still a dearth of understanding on their PK/PD and pharmacology. We present an optimized HPLC-MS technique for the simultaneous analysis of ivacaftor and its major metabolites, and lumacaftor.
Defects in the cystic fibrosis trans-membrane conductance regulator (CFTR) are the cause of cystic fibrosis (CF), a disease with life-threatening pulmonary manifestations. Ivacaftor (IVA) and ivacaftor-lumacaftor (LUMA) combination are two new breakthrough CF drugs that directly modulate the activity and trafficking of the defective CFTR-protein. However, there is still a dearth of understanding on pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic parameters and the pharmacology of ivacaftor and lumacaftor. The HPLC-MS technique for the simultaneous analysis of the concentrations of ivacaftor, hydroxymethyl-ivacaftor, ivacaftor-carboxylate, and lumacaftor in biological fluids in patients receiving standard ivacaftor or ivacaftor-lumacaftor combination therapy has previously been developed by our group and partially validated to FDA standards. However, to allow the high-throughput analysis of a larger number of patient samples, our group has optimized the reported method through the use of a smaller pore size reverse-phase chromatography column (2.6 µm, C8 100 Å; 50 x 2.1 mm) and a gradient solvent system (0-1 min: 40% B; 1-2 min: 40-70% B; 2-2.7 min: held at 70% B; 2.7-2.8 min: 70-90% B; 2.8-4.0 min: 90% B washing; 4.0-4.1 min: 90-40% B; 4.1-6.0 min: held at 40% B) instead of an isocratic elution. The goal of this study was to reduce the HPLC-MS analysis time per sample dramatically from ~15 min to only 6 min per sample, which is essential for the analysis of a large amount of patient samples. This expedient method will be of considerable utility for studies into the exposure-response relationships of these breakthrough CF drugs.
Cystic fibrosis (CF) is a common genetic disease involving the exocrine mucus glands of the lung, liver, pancreas, and intestines causing progressive multi-organ failure, such as a decline in lung function and pancreatic insufficiency1,2,3. Ivacaftor (IVA) is the first Food and Drug Administration (FDA-US) and European Medicines Agency (EMA) approved cystic fibrosis trans-membrane conductance regulator (CFTR) potentiator drug, with evidenced clinical efficacy producing a significant improvement in the lung function over placebo in a small subset of CF patients bearing the G551D-CFTR [glycine (G) in position 551 is replaced by aspartic acid (D)] missense mutation (~4-5% of the CF population)4,5. This orally administered drug increases the CFTR channel opening, thus increasing the chloride ion flow and acting on the primary defect that leads to the clinical manifestations of CF4,6. Unfortunately, IVA monotherapy is not effective in patients with the more common homozygous F508del mutation [in frame deletion of the CFTR gene which results in the loss of phenylalanine (F) at position 508] which results in misfolded CFTR, which is seen in ~50% of the CF population7,8.
Recently, the FDA has granted approval for combining IVA with the CFTR corrector drug lumacaftor. The clever strategy of combining a CFTR corrector (lumacaftor, LUMA) which rescues F508del-CFTR to the cell surface with a modulator (IVA) which potentiates CFTR channel activity, effectively expands the treatment window to most of the CF population5. Questions remain over whether these drugs will fulfill their promise as a number of conflicting reports have emerged that cast doubt upon their clinical efficacy9,10. Additionally, improvements in lung function were only modest (2.6-4% for ivacaftor-lumacaftor combination) compared to the success achieved with IVA monotherapy in patients bearing a G551D mutation (10.6-12.5%)8. Potential antagonistic drug-drug interactions between IVA and LUMA that potentially limit the clinical efficacy of ivacaftor-lumacaftor combination come from its less than ideal pharmacokinetic properties7,11. IVA is extensively metabolized by cytochrome P450 enzymes (CYP), primarily to an active metabolite hydroxymethyl-IVA (IVA-M1, M1) and an inactive form IVA-carboxylate (IVA-M6, M6)7,12. The CYP3A4 inducer LUMA, on the other hand, is not extensively metabolized and is largely excreted unchanged in the feces11. As CYP3A4 inducers induce cytochrome metabolism, ivacaftor (CYP3A4 substrate) concentrations could be reduced. Moreover, both IVA and LUMA are very hydrophobic molecules and are ~99% bound to plasma proteins, which significantly limits the free (active) drug concentration1,13.
Collectively, these factors may be coming together to limit the clinical efficacy of ivacaftor-lumacaftor combination. It is not known whether optimal plasma concentrations are achieved under the current dosage regimen for ivacaftor-lumacaftor combination or if the therapeutic threshold is maintained8. Presently, there is a paucity of information regarding pharmacokinetic parameters such as the peak and steady-state plasma concentrations of ivacaftor or ivacaftor-lumacaftor. Given the noted metabolism of ivacaftor and lumacaftor, monitoring of exposure-response relationships is requisite to achieve optimal dosage regimens for ivacaftor or ivacaftor-lumacaftor therapy. Our group recently published the first HPLC/LC-MS method for the monitoring of exposure-response relationships of IVA and LUMA14. No alternative techniques of measuring the concentrations of ivacaftor, its metabolites, and lumacaftor have been reported to date. To allow the high-throughput analysis of a larger patient collective and to dramatically reduce analysis time, our group has optimized the reported method through the use of a smaller pore size reverse-phase chromatography column and a gradient solvent system that reduces cost and running times.
Approval for ethics was obtained from Monash University Human Research Ethics Committee (MUHREC).
1. Application of the Assay: Patient Sample Collection
2. Preparation and Processing of Incurred Samples and Standards
NOTE: Plasma from healthy donors naïve to ivacaftor/lumacaftor therapy was obtained from the Australian Red Cross. To ensure the integrity, all samples/standards should be kept at 2-8 °C during collection and processing. Once handling is completed, store samples at –20 °C.
3. Pre-treatment of Incurred Samples and Standards
4. HPLC-MS Analysis
NOTE: The HPLC-MS analysis was performed on an LC-MS system coupled with the triple quadrupole mass spectrometer (Table 1).
5. Calibration Curves
We have recently reported a method, partially validated to FDA standards, on a triple-quadrupole LC-MS and an HPLC detector system, using a C8 column (5 µm, 3.9 mm x 50 mm i.d.) with the mobile phase consisting of 100% ACN and 0.1% formic acid in water (40:60, v/v) at a flow rate of 1 mL/min. A linear correlation of the peaks was observed over a concentration range from 0.01 to 10 µg/mL in human plasma for all metabolites, ivacaftor, Iva-M1, Iva-M6, and lumacaftor14. Here this method has...
As previously reported, our group has for the first time developed and validated a HPLC and LC-MS method for rapid detection and quantification of ivacaftor and its major metabolites hydroxymethyl-IVA M1 (active) and IVA-carboxylate M6 (inactive); and lumacaftor in the plasma and sputum of CF patients14. The assay reported by our group previously was successfully used to quantify the concentration of LUMA, IVA, IVA-M1, and IVA-M6 in the plasma and sputum of CF patients undergoing steady state stan...
The authors have nothing to disclose.
J.L. and T.V. are supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) of the National Institutes of Health (R01 AI111965). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases or the National Institutes of Health. MC is an Australian NHMRC Principal Research Fellow. J. L. is an Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Senior Research Fellow, and T.V. is an Australian NHMRC Industry Career Development Level 2 Research Fellow. E.K.S is an appointed Young Ambassador 2017 for ASM (American Society for Microbiology) and is supported by the Australian Postgraduate Award.
Parts of this work was presented at the 12th Australiasian Conference on Cystic Fibrosis In Melbourne (5-8th of August 2017).
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
IVA (Cat#S114) | SelleckChem (USA). | ||
LUMA (Cat#S1565) | SelleckChem (USA). | ||
IVA-carboxylate (Cat# 510242247CS) | Clearsynth (Canada). | ||
hydroxymethyl-IVA (Cat# 510240849CS) | Clearsynth (Canada). | ||
Methanol (MeOH, LC-MS grade), | Sigma-Aldrich | ||
acetonitrile (ACN, LC-MS grade) | Sigma-Aldrich | ||
formic acid (FA) | Sigma-Aldrich | ||
triple-quadrupole Shimadzu 8030 LC-MS | |||
Phenomenex Kinetex (2.6 µm C8 100 Å; 50 × 2.1mm) | |||
(KrudKatcher Ultrea HPLC In-Line Filter 0.5 m Depth Filter x 0.004inID). | |||
1.5 mL polypropylene microcentrifuge tube (VWR). | |||
Eppendorf Centrifuge 5430 | |||
13-mm syringe filter (0.45 µm nylon, GRACE, USA) | |||
[Phenomenex VEREX, 9 mm, PP, 300 µL, PTFE/Silicone septa]. |
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