The DGAT1 inhibitor pradigastat does not induce photosensitivity in healthy human subjects: a randomized controlled trial using three defined sunlight exposure conditions

The DGAT1 inhibitor, pradigastat, demonstrated a mild phototoxicity signal in preclinical studies. Therefore, this clinical trial was conducted to assess the risk of photosensitivity in humans. 47 healthy adults were randomized to part A (double-blind, placebo-controlled; 3 : 1 pradigastat : placebo...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inPhotochemical & photobiological sciences Vol. 15; no. 9; pp. 1155 - 1162
Main Authors Bauer, Daniel, Soon, Rachel L, Kulmatycki, Kenneth, Chen, Yuming, Noe, Adele, Chen, Jin, Dosik, Jonathan S, Meyers, Dan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Cham Springer International Publishing 31.08.2016
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:The DGAT1 inhibitor, pradigastat, demonstrated a mild phototoxicity signal in preclinical studies. Therefore, this clinical trial was conducted to assess the risk of photosensitivity in humans. 47 healthy adults were randomized to part A (double-blind, placebo-controlled; 3 : 1 pradigastat : placebo) or part B (open-label positive control ciprofloxacin, investigator blind). Three irradiation conditions (1. full range UVB/UVA, 2. UVA only, 3. 1/2 MED from UVB/UVA + 16 J cm −2 UVA) were applied to simulate different sunlight exposure conditions. Photosensitizing potential was assessed by determining the minimum erythemal dose (MED) and calculating the photosensitivity index (PI) at 1 and 24 h. Local skin reactions were recorded as a secondary endpoint. Following full UVB/UVA irradiation, there were no significant differences in MED or PI between groups. With UVA-only, no changes in MED or PI were observed for the pradigastat or placebo groups. For ciprofloxacin, there was a significant reduction in MED at 24 h (−32%, vs. 24 h baseline), which correlated to a PI of 1.61. The difference in mean PI between ciprofloxacin-pradigastat, and ciprofloxacin-placebo, was significant at 24 h ( p < 0.001). Local skin erythema scores were comparable between pradigastat and placebo, but higher with ciprofloxacin. Pradigastat was not shown to induce photosensitivity reactions, while significant responses were seen with the positive control. These results strongly suggest that pradigastat will not induce photosensitivity reactions in individuals administered doses up to 40 mg per day, which is the highest intended clinical dose. Furthermore, the design of this clinical trial may serve as a prototype for future regulatory clinical photosensitivity studies. The DGAT1 inhibitor, pradigastat, demonstrated a mild phototoxicity signal in preclinical studies.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ObjectType-Undefined-3
ISSN:1474-905X
1474-9092
1474-9092
DOI:10.1039/c6pp00042h