Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism and Excretion of Molidustat in Healthy Participants.

BASIC & CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY & TOXICOLOGY(2020)

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Abstract
The absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion of molidustat were investigated in healthy male participants. In study 1, a mass balance study, radiolabelled molidustat 25 mg (3.57 MBq) was administered as an oral solution (n = 4). Following rapid absorption, molidustat-related radioactivity was predominantly distributed in plasma rather than in red blood cells. The total recovery of the administered radioactivity was 97.0%, which was mainly excreted renally (90.7%). Metabolite M-1, produced by N-glucuronidation, was the dominant component in plasma (80.2% of the area under the concentration-time curve for total radioactivity) and was primarily excreted via urine (similar to 85% of dose). Only minor amounts of unchanged molidustat were excreted in urine (similar to 4%) and faeces (similar to 6%). Study 2 investigated the absolute bioavailability and pharmacodynamics of molidustat (part 1, n = 12; part 2, n = 16). Orally administered molidustat immediate release tablets had an absolute bioavailability of 59%. Following intravenous administration (1, 5 and 25 mg), total body clearance of molidustat was 28.7-34.5 L/h and volume of distribution at steady state was 39.3-50.0 L. All doses of molidustat transiently elevated endogenous erythropoietin levels, irrespective of the route of administration. Molidustat was considered safe and well tolerated at the administered doses.
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Key words
ADME (absorption,disposition,metabolism,excretion),biotransformation,erythropoietin
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