Is schedule IV suvorexant an appropriate reference drug of abuse to use in preclinical abuse liability testing in the rat?

Regul Toxicol Pharmacol. 2024 Jan 27;148:105570. doi: 10.1016/j.yrtph.2024.105570. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTThe abuse potential of novel CNS-active drug candidates with low specificity for known receptors involved in abuse might be complex to test preclinically relative to an appropriate reference drug of abuse. Suvorexant, a Schedule IV dual orexin receptor antagonist was investigated for its potential use as a reference drug in Drug Discrimination Learning (DDL) studies. Firstly, toxicokinetic properties of suvorexant were determined in male and female rats after single oral doses of 160 and 325 mg/kg in MC and PEG400. Thereafter the subjective effects of suvorexant at 325 mg/kg versus vehicle were evaluated in a DDL paradigm and plasma exposures were measured. Mean maximum plasma exposures in male rats after a single dose of 325 mg/kg suvorexant were 2.5- (MC) to 10.5-fold (PEG400) the human exposure at supratherapeutic doses of 40 mg q.d. (Cmax:1.1 μM), and 4.9- (MC) to 20.8-fold (PEG400) the approved maximum human efficacious dose (20 mg q.d.; 0.557 μM). Training male rats at 325 mg/kg in the DDL study however did not result in discriminative stimulus generalisation versus respective vehicles. Suvorexant, a Schedule IV dual orexin receptor antagonist failed to serve as a robust reference drug of abuse in the DDL paradigm in rats despite appropriate exposures.PMID:38286304 | DOI:10.1016/j.yrtph.2024.105570
Source: Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology : RTP - Category: Toxicology Authors: Source Type: research