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Phase 1 study traces ainuovirine metabolism and excretion in healthy menA single dose of oral ainuovirine clears the body within two days in healthy men

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Key Takeaway
Consider ainuovirine's long half-life and primarily unchanged excretion as favourable pharmacokinetic properties for once-daily dosing.

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.

Scientists gave six healthy men a single dose of oral ainuovirine to see how the body handles it. They tracked the drug for ten days to understand its journey through the system. The team wanted to know exactly where the medicine went and how it left the body. This kind of testing helps doctors decide if a drug is safe and effective for people with HIV-1.

The drug entered the bloodstream quickly, reaching peak levels in about three and a half hours. Most of the medicine left the body unchanged, with over sixty percent exiting through urine and faeces. The rest was processed by the liver before leaving the body. This tells us the drug does not build up dangerously in the system over time.

No safety problems appeared during the short testing period. The men tolerated the medicine well without needing to stop the trial early. While this study only looked at healthy men, the results support using ainuovirine as a strong option for treating HIV-1. The data shows the drug works as expected and leaves the body cleanly.

What this means for you:
A single dose of oral ainuovirine clears the body within two days in healthy men, with most of the drug leaving unchanged.

Study Details

Study typePhase1
EvidenceLevel 4
PublishedMay 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
This trial was a phase 1, single-centre, open-label pharmacokinetic, mass balance and biotransformation study to evaluate absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion of radiolabelled ainuovirine, a novel non-nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitor, in healthy men. Six adults received a single dose of oral suspension containing [C]- ainuovirine, at approximately 150 mg per 100 µCi. Pharmacokinetic parameters were derived from plasma total radioactivity. Mass balance was determined by measuring total radioactivity in plasma, whole blood, urine and faeces. The primary metabolic elimination pathway was characterised by analysing radioactive metabolite profiles in plasma, urine and faeces and the structures of major metabolites were identified. The results showed a C of 327 ng∙Eq./g; T of 3.42 h and t of 43.5 h. The majority (>60 %) of the administered dose was excreted unchanged, primarily via faeces, within the 240-hour collection period. The mean cumulative recovery of total radioactivity was 101.64 %, with 28.10 % in urine and 73.54 % in faeces. Clearance was primarily mediated by CYP2C19 through mono-oxygenation of ainuovirine to form metabolite M341, followed by glucuronidation and subsequent excretion into faeces and urine. These findings, together with in vitro and in vivo pharmacology studies, support the consideration of ainuovirine as a desirable anchor antiretroviral agent for HIV-1 treatment.
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