172 research outputs found

    Prediction of disease progression, treatment response and dropout in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

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    Drug development in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) has been characterised by unacceptably high failure rates. In addition to the poor sensitivity in forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1), numerous causes are known to contribute to this phenomenon, which can be clustered into drug-, disease- and design-related factors. Here we present a model-based approach to describe disease progression, treatment response and dropout in clinical trials with COPD patients

    Pharmacokinetics of Micafungin in Critically Ill Patients

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    We investigated covariates of pharmacokinetics of micafungin in critically ill patients. After application of micafungin, plasma samples were collected. Non-linear mixed effects modelling (NONMEM 7.3) was used to develop the pharmacokinetic model. Using this model, the adequacy of a fixed 100 mg dosing regimen was evaluated in the study cohort. A two-compartment model with linear elimination was found to describe the obtained data. SOFA score was identified as a significant covariate on both clearance and central volume of distribution, respectively. Patients in highly critical condition, represented by a SOFA above 10 showed a 30.8% lower central volume of distribution than the less critically ill patients. For patients with bilirubin levels above 4 mg/dl, clearance was decreased by 21.1%. Renal replacement therapy (RRT) did not influence micafungin clearance or the volumes of distribution. In a posthoc evaluation of the modeled population, 100 mg micafungin was suitable when assessing the PKPD targets (AUC/MIC) for C. albicans and C. glabrata, with insufficient target attainment for C. parapsilosis. Micafungin pharmacokinetics appear not to be influenced by the status of RRT. A dose of 100 mg micafungin is suitable for infections with C. albicans and C. glabrata in critically ill patients

    Continuous infusion of physostigmine in patients with perioperative septic shock: A pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic study with population pharmacokinetic modeling

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    Background In the context of the cholinergic anti-inflammatory pathway, the clinical trial Anticholium® per Se (EudraCT Number: 2012-001650-26, ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03013322) addressed the possibility of taking adjunctive physostigmine salicylate treatment in septic shock from bench to bedside. Pharmacokinetics (PK) are likely altered in critically ill patients; data on physostigmine PK and target concentrations are sparse, particularly for continuous infusion. Our objective was to build a population PK (popPK) model for physostigmine, and further evaluate pharmacodynamics (PD) and concentration-response relationship in this setting. Methods In the randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, 20 patients with perioperative septic shock either received an initial dose of 0.04 mg/kg physostigmine salicylate, followed by continuous infusion of 1 mg/h for up to 120 h, or equivalent volumes of 0.9% sodium chloride (placebo group). Physostigmine plasma concentrations and acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity were measured; concentration-response associations were evaluated, and popPK and PD modeling was performed with NONMEM. Results Steady state physostigmine plasma concentrations reached 7.60 ± 2.81 ng/mL (mean ± standard deviation [SD]). PK was best described by a two-compartment model with linear clearance. Significant covariate effects were detected for body weight and age on clearance, as well as a high inter-individual variability of the central volume of distribution. AChE activity was significantly reduced to 30.5%–50.6% of baseline activity during physostigmine salicylate infusion. A sigmoidal direct effect PD model best described enzyme inhibition by physostigmine, with an estimated half maximal effective concentration (EC50) of 5.99 ng/mL. Conclusions PK of physostigmine in patients with septic shock displayed substantial inter-individual variability with body weight and age influencing the clearance. Physostigmine inhibited AChE activity with a sigmoidal concentration-response effect

    Modélisation pharmacocinétique d'une promédicament en développement

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    The aim of this study was to develop a population pharmacokinetic model for an investigational prodrug with the intention of linking this model to previous works on a modified release form of this prodrug. The data used to create this model were provided from a phase I study. Concentration-time measurements were available for three compounds; the prodrug, the metabolite and the active compound. The model developed is able to describe the pharmacokinetics of the prodrug and its metabolite. Perspectives for future investigations are presented

    Artemisinins

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    Artemisinins were discovered to be highly effective antimalarial drugs shortly after the isolation of the parent artemisinin in 1971 in China. These compounds combine potent, rapid antimalarial activity with a wide therapeutic index and an absence of clinically important resistance. Artemisinin containing regimens meet the urgent need to find effective treatments for multidrug resistant malaria and have recently been advocated for widespread deployment. Comparative trials of artesunate and quinine for severe malaria are in progress to see if the persistently high mortality of this condition can be reduced

    Semimechanistic Population Pharmacokinetic Model to Predict the Drug-Drug Interaction Between S-ketamine and Ticlopidine in Healthy Human Volunteers

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    Low-dose oral S-ketamine is increasingly used in chronic pain therapy, but extensive cytochrome P450 (CYP) mediated metabolism makes it prone to pharmacokinetic drug-drug interactions (DDIs). In our study, concentration-time data from five studies were used to develop a semimechanistic model that describes the ticlopidine-mediated inhibition of S-ketamine biotransformation. A mechanistic model was implemented to account for reversible and time-dependent hepatic CYP2B6 inactivation by ticlopidine, which causes elevated S-ketamine exposure in vivo. A pharmacokinetic model was developed with gut wall and hepatic clearances for S-ketamine, its primary metabolite norketamine, and ticlopidine. Nonlinear mixed effects modeling approach was used (NONMEM version 7.3.0), and the final model was evaluated with visual predictive checks and the sampling-importance-resampling procedure. Our final model produces biologically plausible output and demonstrates that ticlopidine is a strong inhibitor of CYP2B6 mediated S-ketamine metabolism. Simulations from our model may be used to evaluate chronic pain therapy with S-ketamine.Peer reviewe

    An innovative ethosuximide granule formulation designed for pediatric use: Comparative pharmacokinetics, safety, tolerability, and palatability profile versus reference syrup.

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    Ethosuximide, the first-line therapy for childhood absence epilepsy, is currently formulated as a syrup (Zarontin®, Pfizer) with a bitter taste and high sugar content, poorly adapted to children, and a ketogenic diet. The collaborative European FP7 project KIEKIDS aimed at developing an innovative sugar-free, tasteless formulation convenient for pediatric use. This dual Phase-I study evaluated two granule formulations based on lipid multiparticulate (LMP) technology. Two panels of 6 healthy adult volunteers underwent a randomized, placebo-controlled, partly blinded, 3-way cross-over trial, comparing ethosuximide granules A or B with placebo granules and syrup at single 10 mg/kg doses. Corresponding plasma pharmacokinetic profiles of ethosuximide were compared, along with palatability, safety, and tolerability. The LMP granule A proved suboptimal due to bitterness and adherence to beaker walls, while the optimized granule B revealed excellent palatability, similar to placebo granules, and low adherence to glass. The relative bioavailability of granules A versus syrup, based on dose-normalized C <sub>max</sub> and AUC <sub>0-∞</sub> was 93.7% [90% CI: 76.3-115.1] and 96.1% [91.0-101.5], respectively. For granules B it was 87.6% [81.6-94.0] and 92.5% [88.5-96.6], respectively, with slightly delayed t <sub>max</sub> of 0.75 h [0.5-4.05] compared to syrup 0.5 h [0.3-0.8]. Tolerability visual analog scales revealed a trend for statistically non-significant improvement versus syrup at peak (30 min) for transient dizziness (both granules), fatigue (granules A), and anxiety (granules B). The innovative ethosuximide granule formulation B achieves a suitable profile for pediatric use, being sugar-free, tasteless, bioequivalent, and well-tolerated while enabling precise adjustment to body weight

    POPULATION PHARMACOKINETICS OF CONTINUOUS INFUSION OF FACTOR VIII IN HEMOPHILIA-A PATIENTS UNDERGOING ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

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    Objective: to develop a population pharmacokinetic model taking into account blood losses during and after orthopedic surgery in adult hemophilia A patients receiving infusion of coagulation factor VIII, and to evaluate the influence of potential covariates.Methods: Factor VIII pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated from 24 patients. Among them, 7 were HIV+. The observations were analyzed with the mixed-effects compartment pharmacokinetic package NONMEM and the first-order conditional estimation method. To evaluate the stability and robustness of the final model the bootstrap method was used.Results: During the model-building process, central volume of distribution (V1) was related to body weight (P = 0.0263) and viral status (P = 0.0078). Moreover, the peripheral volume of distribution was related to body weight (P=0.0362). In the final model, only the viral status was significant for V1 when compared with the base model. Posterior predictive checks and robustness analysis showed that the model adequately described the pharmacokinetic parameters. The HIV covariate accounted for 29.8% of the unexplained variation across patients for V1. V1 increased by 33.3% in HIV+ patients compared to HIV- patients.Conclusion: A population pharmacokinetic model taking into account blood losses during and after orthopedic surgery was developed. The 33.3% increase in V1 observed in HIV+ patients explained the need for higher doses in these patients.Â
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