Literature DB >> 11309548

A population pharmacokinetic screen to identify demographic-clinical covariates of basiliximab in liver transplantation.

J M Kovarik1, B Nashan, P Neuhaus, P A Clavien, C Gerbeau, M L Hall, A Korn.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Basiliximab is a high-affinity interleukin-2 receptor (CD25) chimeric monoclonal antibody used for immunoprophylaxis in organ transplantation. It was assessed in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled efficacy trial in de novo liver allograft recipients who received 40 mg of basiliximab (20 mg on days 0 and 4) in addition to baseline immunosuppression with cyclosporine (INN, ciclosporin) microemulsion and corticosteroids.
METHODS: Serial blood samples (8.3 +/- 1.4 per patient) were collected during 12 weeks after transplantation from 184 basiliximab-treated patients, and empirical Bayes estimates of each patient's disposition parameters were derived. Demographic-clinical covariates were explored with regression methods.
RESULTS: Basiliximab clearance was 55 +/- 26 mL/h, the distribution volume was 9.7 +/- 4.2 L, and the half-life was 8.7 +/- 6.7 days. Patient weight, age, sex, ethnicity, history of alcoholism, hepatitis C seropositivity, and notable postoperative bleeding had no clinically relevant influences on basiliximab disposition; however, the cumulative volume of drained ascites fluid in the first week was positively correlated with clearance. Receptor-saturating basiliximab concentrations (> or =0.1 microg/mL) were maintained for 38 +/- 16 days, and this was negatively correlated with the cumulative volume of drained ascites fluid in week 1. Patients who experienced an acute rejection episode did not clear basiliximab at a faster rate than their rejection-free peers nor did they maintain CD25-saturating concentrations for a shorter period.
CONCLUSIONS: Although the standard dose regimen of 20 mg of basiliximab on days 0 and 4 after transplantation appears to be appropriate for the majority of patients with liver transplants, a supplemental dose at the end of the first week may be considered for those with substantial (>10 L) postoperative ascites fluid drainage.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11309548     DOI: 10.1067/mcp.2001.114887

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Pharmacol Ther        ISSN: 0009-9236            Impact factor:   6.875


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