Clinical and Translational Science (May 2019)

Impact of Insulin Tregopil and Its Permeation Enhancer on Pharmacokinetics of Metformin in Healthy Volunteers: Randomized, Open‐Label, Placebo‐Controlled, Crossover Study

  • Anand Khedkar,
  • Harold Lebovitz,
  • Alexander Fleming,
  • Alan Cherrington,
  • Vinu Jose,
  • Sandeep N. Athalye,
  • Ashwini Vishweswaramurthy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/cts.12609
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
pp. 276 – 282

Abstract

Read online

Oral insulin tregopil (IN‐105; a new drug under development) may be coadministered with oral antidiabetic drugs, such as metformin in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus for optimal glycemic control. IN‐105 has sodium caprate excipient, a permeation enhancer, for enhancing absorption in the stomach and increasing bioavailability via an oral route. Sodium caprate may increase bioavailability of metformin by a similar mechanism. Therefore, it was necessary to study the effect of IN‐105 on pharmacokinetics (PKs) of metformin. In this randomized, open‐label, cross‐over study, metformin was administered to healthy volunteers receiving IN‐105/placebo under fed/fasting conditions. The 90% confidence interval (CI) of the geometric mean ratio of the area under the curve from time zero to infinity (AUC0‐inf; fasting and fed) and peak plasma concentration (Cmax; fed) of metformin were within 0.80–1.25 acceptance range. Under fasting conditions, the upper bound margin of Cmax was just beyond this range (i.e., 1.27) and was concluded as functionally not relevant. There was no clinically significant effect of sodium caprate/IN‐105 on PKs of metformin under fasting/fed conditions, and it was safe.