1. Academic Validation
  2. Pharmacokinetics, metabolism, and excretion of the antidiabetic agent ertugliflozin (PF-04971729) in healthy male subjects

Pharmacokinetics, metabolism, and excretion of the antidiabetic agent ertugliflozin (PF-04971729) in healthy male subjects

  • Drug Metab Dispos. 2013 Feb;41(2):445-56. doi: 10.1124/dmd.112.049551.
Zhuang Miao 1 Gianluca Nucci Neeta Amin Raman Sharma Vincent Mascitti Meera Tugnait Alfin D Vaz Ernesto Callegari Amit S Kalgutkar
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Pharmacokinetics, Dynamics and Metabolism, New Chemical Entities, Groton, CT, USA.
Abstract

The disposition of ertugliflozin (PF-04971729), an orally active selective inhibitor of the sodium-dependent glucose cotransporter 2, was studied after a single 25-mg oral dose of [(14)C]-ertugliflozin to healthy human subjects. Mass balance was achieved with approximately 91% of the administered dose recovered in urine and feces. The total administered radioactivity excreted in feces and urine was 40.9% and 50.2%, respectively. The absorption of ertugliflozin in humans was rapid with a T(max) at ∼1.0 hour. Of the total radioactivity excreted in feces and urine, unchanged ertugliflozin collectively accounted for ∼35.3% of the dose, suggestive of moderate metabolic elimination in humans. The principal biotransformation pathway involved glucuronidation of the glycoside hydroxyl groups to yield three regioisomeric metabolites, M4a, M4b, and M4c (∼39.3% of the dose in urine), of which M4c was the major regioisomer (∼31.7% of the dose). The structure of M4a and M4c were confirmed to be ertugliflozin -4-O-β- and -3-O-β-glucuronide, respectively, via comparison of the HPLC retention time and mass spectra with authentic standards. A minor metabolic fate involved oxidation by Cytochrome P450 to yield monohydroxylated metabolites M1 and M3 and des-ethyl ertugliflozin (M2), which accounted for ∼5.2% of the dose in excreta. In plasma, unchanged ertugliflozin and the corresponding 4-O-β- (M4a) and 3-O-β- (M4c) glucuronides were the principal components, which accounted for 49.9, 12.2, and 24.1% of the circulating radioactivity. Overall, these data suggest that ertugliflozin is well absorbed in humans, and eliminated largely via glucuronidation.

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