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Volume of distribution at steady state (VD,ss) is one of the key pharmacokinetic parameters estimated during the drug discovery process. Despite considerable efforts to predict VD,ss, accuracy and choice of prediction methods remain a challenge, with evaluations constrained to a small set (D,ss directly from structure were evaluated using a large set of clinical compounds. Machine learning (ML) models were built to predict VD,ss directly and to predict input parameters required for mechanistic and empirical VD,ss predictions. In addition, log D, fraction unbound in plasma (fup), and blood-to-plasma partition ratio (BPR) were measured on 254 compounds to estimate the impact of measured data on predictive performance of mechanistic models. Furthermore, the impact of novel methodologies such as measuring partition (Kp) in adipocytes and myocytes (n = 189) on VD,ss predictions was also investigated. In predicting VD,ss directly from chemical structures, both mechanistic and empirical scaling using a combination of predicted rat and dog VD,ss demonstrated comparable performance (62%-71% within 3-fold). The direct ML model outperformed other in silico methods (75% within 3-fold, r 2 = 0.5, AAFE = 2.2) when built from a larger data set. Scaling to human from predicted VD,ss of either rat or dog yielded poor results (D,ss predictions significantly (81% within 3-fold, r 2 = 0.6, AAFE = 2.0). Adipocyte intracellular Kp showed good correlation to the VD,ss but was limited in estimating the compounds with low VD,ss SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: This work advances the in silico prediction of VD,ss directly from structure and with the aid of in vitro data. Rigorous and comprehensive evaluation of various methods using a large set of clinical compounds (n = 956) is presented. The scale of techniques evaluated is far beyond any previously presented. The novel data set (n = 254) generated using a single protocol for each in vitro assay reported in this study could further aid in advancing VD,ss prediction methodologies.
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Neha Murad
San Francisco VA Medical Center
Kishore Kumar Pasikanti
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Benjamin D. Madej
Revolution Medicines (United States)
Drug Metabolism and Disposition
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
GlaxoSmithKline (United States)
Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research
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Murad et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d9ca0900ab073a278374fe — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1124/dmd.120.000202