Phase 1 study traces ainuovirine metabolism and excretion in healthy men
This phase 1, single-centre, open-label study evaluated the absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion of a single oral dose of radiolabelled ainuovirine (approximately 150 mg per 100 µCi) in 6 healthy adult men. The primary objective was to characterize the pharmacokinetic profile and mass balance of the drug. Over a 240-hour collection period, the mean cumulative recovery of total radioactivity was 101.64%, indicating complete recovery. Radioactivity was recovered primarily in faeces (73.54%) and urine (28.10%). The drug was largely excreted unchanged, with >60% of the administered dose recovered as parent compound. The maximum plasma concentration (Cmax) was 327 ng·Eq./g, reached at a median Tmax of 3.42 hours, and the terminal half-life (t1/2) was 43.5 hours. The primary metabolic elimination pathway involved CYP2C19-mediated mono-oxygenation to form metabolite M341, followed by glucuronidation and excretion. Adverse events and tolerability were not reported. Limitations include the small sample size, single-dose design, and lack of comparator. These findings provide preliminary pharmacokinetic data that support the consideration of ainuovirine as a potential anchor antiretroviral agent for HIV-1 treatment, but further studies in patients are needed.