Skip to main content

New Drug Approvals 2011 - Pt. VI Roflumilast (DalirespTM)








ATC code: R03DX07


On February 28th, 2011, the FDA approved Roflumilast (tradename:Daxas tradename:Daliresp NDA 022522) for the treatment of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) a chronic and serious disease involving restriction of full lung function. The narrowing of airways of COPD is irreversible, and follows inflammation in the lung, believed to be linked to environmental pollutants such as tobacco smoke, workplace dusts and urban air pollution. This inflammation causes structural damage to the delicate alveoli structures.

Roflumilast and an active metabolite, Roflumilast-N-Oxide, are selective Phosphodiesterase 4 inhibitors. The subfamily of Type 4 Phospodiesterases comprises four distinct members, PDE4A, -4B, -4C, and -4D (Uniprot:P27815, Q07343, Q08493, Q08499, respectively, all are very closely related enzymes containing a characteristic cyclic nucleotide diesterase catalytic domain Pfam:PF00233). These in turn occur in different splicing isoforms with tissue specific expression, many of them in the lung. Phosphodiesterase 4 catalyzes a reaction transforming cyclic 3'-5'-adenosine monophosphate (cAMP, ChEBI: 17489) into adenosine 5'-monophosphate (AMP). Roflumilast has an IC50 against PDE-4 of ca. 2nM, affinities against the PDE4A, PDE4B, and PDE4D isozymes are all similar, whereas affinity against the PDE4C isozyme is ca. 5 fold lower. The exact mechanism by which Roflumilast reduces the risk of COPD exacerbations is not known, but it is believed that an increase in cAMP levels in lung cells attenuates the abnormal inflammation process associated with COPD. In clinical trials, it was observed that the numbers of specific types of immune cells - eosinophils and neutophils - were reduced by 31% and 42% after 4 weeks of treatment with Roflumilast.


Roflumilast ( IUPAC: 3-(cyclopropylmethoxy)-N-(3,5-dichloropyridin-4-yl)-4-(difluoromethoxy)benzamide InChI: 1S/C17H14Cl2F2N2O3/c18-11-6-22-7-12(19)15(11)23-16(24)10-3-4-13(26-17(20)21)14(5-10)25-8-9-1-2-9/h3-7,9,17H,1-2,8H2,(H,22,23,24) SMILES: FC(F)Oc1ccc(cc1OCC2CC2)C(=O)Nc3c(Cl)cncc3Cl Chemspider:395793 ChEMBL:193240) is a synthetic small molecule drug containing no chiral centers. It has a molecular weight of 403.2 Da and calculated LogP of 4.4. Roflumilast has 4 hydrogen bond acceptors and 1 hydrogen bond donor and therefore fully complies with Lipinski's rule of five.

The structure of a number of phosphodiesterase enzymes are known, including a number of PDE4 isoforms, a typical complex of PDE4D with an inhibitor is PDBe:1y2k


Roflumilast's oral bioavailability (at the recommended dose of 500 ug) is approximately 80% and the volume of distribution (Vd) is about 2.9 L.kg-1 and a clearance (CL) of 9.6 L.hr-1. Roflumilast is transformed into an active metabolite, Roflumilast-N-oxide via a metabolic route involving cytochromes CYP1A2 (Uniprot: P05177) and CYP3A4 (Uniprot: P08684). It is the only metabolite observed in humans at relevant plasma concentrations. In-vitro inhibition of Phosphodiesterase 4 by the active metabolite is three times less potent compared to the parent compound. However, its plasma AUC is about 10-fold greater than the plasma AUC of Roflumilast.  Maximum plasma concentrations CMAX of Roflumilast and Roflumilast-N-oxide are reached after 1 hour and eight hours, respectively.  Plasma protein binding (ppb) of the dosed drug and the active metabolite is 99% and 97% respectively. Roflumilast is eliminated primarily through the urine and the drug's half life after oral administration is 17 hours and 30 hours for Roflumilast-N-oxide.

Roflumilast is administered once daily as an oral tablet containing 500 ug of active ingredient (equivalent to 1.2 umol).

The full prescribing information can be found here.

Roflumilast was approved by the European commission in 2010 and is marketed in Europe as Daxas. In the US, Roflumilast will be marketed by Forest Pharmaceuticals under the trade name Daliresp (product website).

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

SureChEMBL Available Now

Followers of the ChEMBL group's activities and this blog will be aware of our involvement in the migration of the previously commercially available SureChem chemistry patent system, to a new, free-for-all system, known as SureChEMBL. Today we are very pleased to announce that the migration process is complete and the SureChEMBL website is now online. SureChEMBL provides the research community with the ability to search the patent literature using Lucene-based keyword queries and, much more importantly, chemistry-based queries. If you are not familiar with SureChEMBL, we recommend you review the content of these earlier blogposts here and here . SureChEMBL is a live system, which is continuously extracting chemical entities from the patent literature. The time it takes for a new chemical in the patent literature to become searchable in the SureChEMBL system is 1-2 days (WO patents can sometimes take a bit longer due to an additional reprocessing step). At time of writi

New SureChEMBL announcement

(Generated with DALL-E 3 ∙ 30 October 2023 at 1:48 pm) We have some very exciting news to report: the new SureChEMBL is now available! Hooray! What is SureChEMBL, you may ask. Good question! In our portfolio of chemical biology services, alongside our established database of bioactivity data for drug-like molecules ChEMBL , our dictionary of annotated small molecule entities ChEBI , and our compound cross-referencing system UniChem , we also deliver a database of annotated patents! Almost 10 years ago , EMBL-EBI acquired the SureChem system of chemically annotated patents and made this freely accessible in the public domain as SureChEMBL. Since then, our team has continued to maintain and deliver SureChEMBL. However, this has become increasingly challenging due to the complexities of the underlying codebase. We were awarded a Wellcome Trust grant in 2021 to completely overhaul SureChEMBL, with a new UI, backend infrastructure, and new f

ChEMBL & SureChEMBL anniversary symposium

  In 2024 we celebrate the 15th anniversary of the first public release of the ChEMBL database as well as the 10th anniversary of SureChEMBL. To recognise this important landmark we are organising a two-day symposium to celebrate the work achieved by ChEMBL and SureChEMBL, and look forward to its future.   Save the date for the ChEMBL 15 Year Symposium October 1-2, 2024     Day one will consist of four workshops, a basic ChEMBL drug design workshop; an advanced ChEMBL workshop (EUbOPEN community workshop); a ChEMBL data deposition workshop; and a SureChEMBL workshop. Day two will consist of a series of talks from invited speakers, a few poster flash talks, a local nature walk, as well as celebratory cake. During the breaks, the poster session will be a great opportunity to catch up with other users and collaborators of the ChEMBL resources and chat to colleagues, co-workers and others to find out more about how the database is being used. Lunch and refreshments will be pro

ChEMBL 34 is out!

We are delighted to announce the release of ChEMBL 34, which includes a full update to drug and clinical candidate drug data. This version of the database, prepared on 28/03/2024 contains:         2,431,025 compounds (of which 2,409,270 have mol files)         3,106,257 compound records (non-unique compounds)         20,772,701 activities         1,644,390 assays         15,598 targets         89,892 documents Data can be downloaded from the ChEMBL FTP site:  https://ftp.ebi.ac.uk/pub/databases/chembl/ChEMBLdb/releases/chembl_34/ Please see ChEMBL_34 release notes for full details of all changes in this release:  https://ftp.ebi.ac.uk/pub/databases/chembl/ChEMBLdb/releases/chembl_34/chembl_34_release_notes.txt New Data Sources European Medicines Agency (src_id = 66): European Medicines Agency's data correspond to EMA drugs prior to 20 January 2023 (excluding vaccines). 71 out of the 882 newly added EMA drugs are only authorised by EMA, rather than from other regulatory bodies e.g.

RDKit, C++ and Jupyter Notebook

Fancy playing with RDKit C++ API without needing to set up a C++ project and compile it? But wait... isn't C++ a compiled programming language? How this can be even possible? Thanks to Cling (CERN's C++ interpreter) and xeus-cling jupyter kernel is possible to use C++ as an intepreted language inside a jupyter notebook! We prepared a simple notebook showing few examples of RDKit functionalities and a docker image in case you want to run it. With the single requirement of docker being installed in your computer you'll be able to easily run the examples following the three steps below: docker pull eloyfelix/rdkit_jupyter_cling docker run -d -p 9999:9999 eloyfelix/rdkit_jupyter_cling open  http://localhost:9999/notebooks/rdkit_cling.ipynb  in a browser