Oral repeated-dose toxicity studies of BIA 10–2474 in Wistar rat

2019 
Abstract BIA 10–2474 is a novel fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) inhibitor developed for the treatment of medical conditions which would benefit from enhanced levels of endogenous anandamide (AEA) such as pain disorders. During a Phase I clinical trial one subject died after receiving BIA 10–2474 and four other subjects displayed neurological signs. As part of series of papers presenting all the toxicology data available prior to the clinical trial, we report here the preclinical toxicology studies examining once-a-day oral administration of BIA 10–2474 to male and female Wistar rats. These included a 14-day dose range finding (150, 200 and 250 mg/kg/day), a 4-week study (30, 90 and 150 mg/kg/day) and 13- and 26-week studies (both at 10, 30 and 90 mg/kg/day). The 13- and 26-week studies also included a 4-week recovery arm and a toxicokinetic arm for the parent compound, BIA 10–2474, and the two major metabolites (BIA 10–2445 and BIA 10–2583) were also measured in the 26-week study. At 150 mg/kg and below, all animals survived the scheduled treatment periods although neurological side-effects (abnormal or stiff gait, dragging of fore- or hind-limbs) were seen at 150 mg/kg in both the dose-range finding and 4-week studies. At 90 mg/kg/day, even up to 26-weeks treatment, no clinical signs were seen apart from some decreases in body weight gain. A number of consistent hematological and biochemical changes were noted which were considered related to treatment with BIA 10–2474. Morphologically, in the 4-week study, except for a slight gliosis in the hippocampus of one female at 150 mg/kg, no CNS histopathology was observed; hippocampus gliosis was not observed in subsequent studies. In the 13-week study axonal swelling was present in the medulla oblongata in about half the animals at 90 mg/kg/day and this increased to nearly all the rats at 90 mg/kg/day in the 26-week study. Additional signs seen only in the 26-week study at 90 mg/kg/day included axonal swelling of the fasiculus gracilis and vacuolar changes in the medulla oblongata and ventral commissure of the 3rd ventricle. Other findings included vacuolar degeneration in the ganglia of the GI tract, salivary glands, prostate gland, uterus, and parathyroid glands. The pituitary gland showed edema and mitotic figures in the pars nervosa. These observations outside the CNS were seen in most rats at 90 and 150 mg/kg/day independent of study duration. At 30 mg/kg/day, most of these observations were only seen in isolated cases except for the vacuolar degeneration in GI tract ganglia, which was absent at this dose after 4 weeks treatment but was present in almost all rats at 13 and 26 weeks. Hepatocellular hypertrophy and nephropathy were seen across all studies and the extent of these changes was similar in the 13- and 26-week studies. Most findings resolved after the 4-week recovery periods except for the axonal swelling seen in the medulla oblongata and spinal cord. BIA 10–2474 exposure was markedly higher than the exposure to either metabolite, BIA 10–2445 (19- to 192-fold) and BIA 10–2583 (63- to 526-fold). Exposure to metabolites differed between sexes with higher concentrations of BIA 10–2445 in females compared to males, but the inverse for BIA 10–2583. Although a No Observed Adverse Effect Level (NOAEL) of 30 mg/kg/day was concluded following the 4-week study, the histopathological findings at that dose in the 13- and 26-week studies resulted in the NOAEL being determined to be 10 mg/kg/day.
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