Clinical and Translational Science (Apr 2023)

PK/PD analysis of trazodone and gabapentin in neuropathic pain rodent models: Translational PK‐PD modeling from nonclinical to clinical development

  • Laura Oggianu,
  • Beatrice Garrone,
  • Francesco Fiorentini,
  • Francesca Del Bene,
  • Maria Teresa Rosignoli,
  • Francesco Paolo Di Giorgio,
  • Rafal Marian Kaminski

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/cts.13472
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 4
pp. 606 – 617

Abstract

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Abstract A pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) model was developed to describe the time course of writhings after intraperitoneal injection of acetic acid in mice. The model was applied to investigate the antinociceptive effect of trazodone and gabapentin alone and in combination. Writhings time course was described by a transit compartment model with the delay due to the transit of the acetic acid being represented by a chain of intermediate compartments. In the drug‐treated animals, the number of writhings decreases according to a k2 factor linking drug concentration and antinociceptive effect. Compounds' potency parameters were 10.9 and 0.0459 L/μmoles/min for trazodone and gabapentin, respectively, indicating a much higher in vivo potency of trazodone in the PD writhing test. The PK/PD parameters were used to simulate the expected writhing counts in mice at combined doses without efficacy alone, assuming pharmacological additivity. Simulation results indicated that, at low dose combinations, experimental data were mostly below the simulated writhings median, suggesting possible synergic effect. Such hypothesis was tested by adding the γ parameter in the PK/PD model to represent the deviation from the assumption of no‐interaction, leading to a reduction of the objective function compared to the additive model. On this basis, several simulations were performed to identify possible starting dose combinations of trazodone and gabapentin in humans, by selecting doses yielding systemic exposures close to those being synergic in the mouse. Simulations indicated that doses of 50–100 mg trazodone could enhance gabapentin antinociceptive effect in humans, supporting the development of a low dose combination for optimal analgesia treatment.