Literature DB >> 24548978

Evaluation of the effects of formulation and food on the pharmacokinetics of lenvatinib (E7080) in healthy volunteers.

Robert Shumaker, Jagadeesh Aluri, Jean Fan, Gresel Martinez, Min Ren, Kun Chen.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effect of formulation and a high-fat meal on the pharmacokinetics of orally administered lenvatinib (E7080). MATERIALS: Lenvatinib 10-mg capsule and tablet.
METHODS: Pharmacokinetics and safety of a single 10-mg lenvatinib dose were evaluated in healthy subjects in two randomized, two-period, crossover, phase 1, bioavailability trials. The first compared a new capsule formulation with an older tablet formulation (n = 20 subjects); the second evaluated the influence of a standard high-fat meal on the relative bioavailability of the capsule formulation (n = 16 subjects). Geometric least squares mean ratios of AUC0-∞, maximum observed concentration (Cmax), and AUC0-t were determined. tmax, tlag (food effect only), and t1/2,z were also calculated, and descriptive statistics were provided.
RESULTS: A total of 36 healthy volunteers were enrolled in the two studies (mean ages 29 and 33 years). In the formulation study, AUC0-∞ and AUC0-t of the capsule formulation were ~ 10% less than the tablet formulation, and Cmax for the capsule formulation was ~ 14% lower. 90% Confidence intervals (CIs) for both AUCs were within the 80 - 125% CI, which is generally considered to denote bioequivalence, while the lower bound of the interval for Cmax was 79.8%. tmax and t1/2,z were comparable. For the capsule formulation, the mean (%CV) t1/2,z was 27.6 hours (27.3) and the median (range) tmax was 2.0 hours (2 - 4). In the food effect study, lenvatinib's AUC0-∞ and AUC0-t increased ~ 6% and 4% with the high-fat meal. Cmax following a high-fat meal was 5% lower than following administration in the fasted state. Administration with food delayed lenvatinib's tmax (2 vs. 4 hours). 90% CIs for AUCs were within the 80 - 125% CI, while the CI for Cmax was 72.1 - 126.4%. The single 10-mg dose demonstrated an acceptable tolerability profile; treatment-emergent adverse events occurred in 9 subjects (25%) overall and were typically mild in severity.
CONCLUSIONS: These studies show that a new capsule formulation produces slightly lower exposure (~10 - 14%) to lenvatinib compared with the original tablet formulation, and that oral administration with a high-fat meal does not significantly affect exposure, although absorption is delayed. Thus, lenvatinib can be administered without regard to the timing of meals.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24548978     DOI: 10.5414/CP201937

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Clin Pharmacol Ther        ISSN: 0946-1965            Impact factor:   1.366


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