AIMS: This study characterized the population pharmacokinetics of edoxaban in patients with symptomatic deep-vein thrombosis and/or pulmonary embolism in the Hokusai-VTE phase 3 study. The impact of the protocol-specified 50% dose reductions applied to patients with body weight ≤ 60 kg, creatinine clearance (CL(cr)) of 30 to 50 ml min(-1) or concomitant P-glycoprotein inhibitor on edoxaban exposure was assessed using simulations. METHODS: The sparse data from Hokusai-VTE, 9531 concentrations collected from 3707 patients, were pooled with data from 13 phase 1 studies. In the analysis, the covariate relationships used for dose reductions were estimated and differences between healthy subjects and patients as well as additional covariate effects of age, race and gender were explored based on statistical and clinical significance. RESULTS: A linear two-compartment model with first order absorption preceded by a lag time best described the data. Allometrically scaled body weight was included on disposition parameters. Apparent clearance was parameterized as non-renal and renal. The latter increased non-linearly with increasing CL(cr). Compared with healthy volunteers, inter-compartmental clearance and the CL(cr) covariate effect were different in patients (+64.6% and +274%). Asian patients had a 22.6% increased apparent central volume of distribution. The effect of co-administration of P-glycoprotein inhibitors seen in phase 1 could not be confirmed in the phase 3 data. Model-based simulations revealed lower exposure in dose-reduced compared with non-dose-reduced patients. CONCLUSIONS: The adopted dose-reduction strategy resulted in reduced exposure compared with non-dose-reduced, thereby overcompensating for covariate effects. The clinical impact of these differences on safety and efficacy remains to be evaluated.
AIMS: This study characterized the population pharmacokinetics of edoxaban in patients with symptomatic deep-vein thrombosis and/or pulmonary embolism in the Hokusai-VTE phase 3 study. The impact of the protocol-specified 50% dose reductions applied to patients with body weight ≤ 60 kg, creatinine clearance (CL(cr)) of 30 to 50 ml min(-1) or concomitant P-glycoprotein inhibitor on edoxaban exposure was assessed using simulations. METHODS: The sparse data from Hokusai-VTE, 9531 concentrations collected from 3707 patients, were pooled with data from 13 phase 1 studies. In the analysis, the covariate relationships used for dose reductions were estimated and differences between healthy subjects and patients as well as additional covariate effects of age, race and gender were explored based on statistical and clinical significance. RESULTS: A linear two-compartment model with first order absorption preceded by a lag time best described the data. Allometrically scaled body weight was included on disposition parameters. Apparent clearance was parameterized as non-renal and renal. The latter increased non-linearly with increasing CL(cr). Compared with healthy volunteers, inter-compartmental clearance and the CL(cr) covariate effect were different in patients (+64.6% and +274%). Asian patients had a 22.6% increased apparent central volume of distribution. The effect of co-administration of P-glycoprotein inhibitors seen in phase 1 could not be confirmed in the phase 3 data. Model-based simulations revealed lower exposure in dose-reduced compared with non-dose-reduced patients. CONCLUSIONS: The adopted dose-reduction strategy resulted in reduced exposure compared with non-dose-reduced, thereby overcompensating for covariate effects. The clinical impact of these differences on safety and efficacy remains to be evaluated.
Authors: Harry R Büller; Hervé Décousus; Michael A Grosso; Michele Mercuri; Saskia Middeldorp; Martin H Prins; Gary E Raskob; Sebastian M Schellong; Lee Schwocho; Annelise Segers; Minggao Shi; Peter Verhamme; Phil Wells Journal: N Engl J Med Date: 2013-08-31 Impact factor: 91.245
Authors: Daniel E Salazar; Jeanne Mendell; Helen Kastrissios; Michelle Green; Timothy J Carrothers; SaeHeum Song; Indravadan Patel; Tomas S Bocanegra; Elliott M Antman; Robert P Giugliano; Satoshi Kunitada; Bruce Dornseif; Minggao Shi; Masaya Tachibana; Simon Zhou; Shashank Rohatagi Journal: Thromb Haemost Date: 2012-03-08 Impact factor: 5.249
Authors: Ronald Niebecker; Siv Jönsson; Mats O Karlsson; Raymond Miller; Joakim Nyberg; Elke H J Krekels; Ulrika S H Simonsson Journal: Br J Clin Pharmacol Date: 2015-09-30 Impact factor: 4.335
Authors: Elke H J Krekels; Ronald Niebecker; Mats O Karlsson; Raymond Miller; Takako Shimizu; Kristin E Karlsson; Christian T Ruff; Ulrika S H Simonsson; Siv Jönsson Journal: Clin Pharmacokinet Date: 2016-09 Impact factor: 6.447
Authors: Ronald Niebecker; Siv Jönsson; Mats O Karlsson; Raymond Miller; Joakim Nyberg; Elke H J Krekels; Ulrika S H Simonsson Journal: Br J Clin Pharmacol Date: 2015-09-30 Impact factor: 4.335
Authors: J Nyberg; K E Karlsson; S Jönsson; Oqp Yin; R Miller; M O Karlsson; Ush Simonsson Journal: CPT Pharmacometrics Syst Pharmacol Date: 2016-04-15