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Pharmacokinetics, safety and tolerability of the novel, selective mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist finerenone – results from first‐in‐man and relative bioavailability studies
Author(s) -
Lentini Silvia,
Heinig Roland,
KimmeskampKirschbaum Nina,
Wensing Georg
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
fundamental and clinical pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.655
H-Index - 73
eISSN - 1472-8206
pISSN - 0767-3981
DOI - 10.1111/fcp.12170
Subject(s) - pharmacokinetics , tolerability , medicine , bioavailability , pharmacology , urology , adverse effect
Abstract The safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of the selective nonsteroidal mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist finerenone were evaluated in healthy male volunteers in two randomized, single‐centre studies. Study 1 was a first‐in‐man, single‐blinded, placebo‐controlled, parallel‐group, dose‐escalation study. Fasted participants ( n = 45) received single oral doses of finerenone 1–40 mg polyethylene glycol ( PEG ) solution or placebo. Study 2 was a relative bioavailability study comparing a finerenone 10 mg immediate‐release ( IR ) tablet with finerenone 10 mg PEG solution in the fasted state, investigating the effect of a high‐fat/high‐calorie meal on the pharmacokinetics of the IR tablet and assessing a further dose escalation to finerenone 80 mg (eight × finerenone 10 mg IR tablets), in an open‐label, fourfold crossover design ( n = 15). Finerenone was rapidly absorbed from PEG solution (median time to maximum plasma concentration [ t max ]: 0.500–1.00 h), exhibited dose‐linear pharmacokinetics and was rapidly eliminated from plasma (geometric mean terminal half‐life [ t ½ ]: 1.70–2.83 h). Finerenone IR tablets demonstrated similar pharmacokinetics (median t max : 0.750–2.50 h; geometric mean t ½ : 1.89–4.29 h) with, however, enhanced bioavailability versus PEG solution (least‐squares mean tablet/solution ratio of 187% for area under the plasma–concentration curve [ AUC ] and maximum plasma concentration [ C max ]). High‐fat/high‐calorie food affected the rate but not the extent of finerenone absorption. Finerenone was well tolerated and did not influence clinical laboratory parameters, blood pressure, heart rate, urinary electrolytes or neurohormones, including serum aldosterone and angiotensin II . In conclusion, finerenone has favourable pharmacokinetics and tolerability in healthy men, and is suitable for dosing independent of food intake.

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