| Literature DB >> 27299709 |
J Nyberg1, K E Karlsson1, S Jönsson1, Oqp Yin2, R Miller2, M O Karlsson1, Ush Simonsson1.
Abstract
Edoxaban exposure-response relationships from the phase III study evaluating edoxaban for prevention and treatment of venous thromboembolism (VTE) in patients with acute deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and/or pulmonary embolism (PE) were assessed by parametric time-to-event analysis. Statistical significant exposure-response relationships were recurrent VTE with hazard ratio (HR) based on average edoxaban concentration at steady state (Cav) (HRCav) = 0.98 (i.e., change in the HR with every 1 ng/mL increase of Cav); the composite of recurrent DVT and nonfatal PE with HRCav = 0.99; and the composite of recurrent DVT, nonfatal PE, and all-cause mortality HRCav = 0.98, and all death using maximal edoxaban concentration (Cmax) with HR (Cmax) = 0.99. No statistical significant exposure-response relationships were found for clinically relevant bleeding or major adverse cardiovascular event. Results support the recommendation of once-daily edoxaban 60 mg, and a reduced 30 mg dose in patients with moderate renal impairment, body weight ≤60 kg, or use of P-glycoprotein inhibitors verapamil or quinidine.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27299709 PMCID: PMC4846783 DOI: 10.1002/psp4.12077
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CPT Pharmacometrics Syst Pharmacol ISSN: 2163-8306
Observed events related to efficacy endpoints
| Treatment group | Recurrent VTE | Recurrent DVT + nonfatal PE | Recurrent DVT + nonfatal PE + all‐cause mortality | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total no. of patients | No. of first events | % of events | No. of first events | % of events | No. of first events | % of events | |
| Warfarin | 4,122 | 80 | 1.94 | 71 | 1.72 | 100 | 2.43 |
| Edoxaban | |||||||
| 60 mg full dose | 3,385 | 53 | 1.57 | 46 | 1.36 | 66 | 1.95 |
| 30 mg reduced dose | 733 | 13 | 1.77 | 9 | 1.23 | 18 | 2.46 |
DVT, deep vein thrombosis; PE, pulmonary embolism; VTE, venous thromboembolism.
Observed events related to safety endpoints
| Treatment group | Clinically relevant bleeding | All death | MACE | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total no. of patients | No. of first events | % of events | No. of first events | % of events | No. of first events | % of events | |
| Warfarin | 4,122 | 422 | 10.2 | 31 | 0.752 | 40 | 0.970 |
| Edoxaban | |||||||
| 60 mg full dose | 3,385 | 291 | 8.60 | 22 | 0.650 | 36 | 1.06 |
| 30 mg reduced dose | 733 | 58 | 7.91 | 9 | 1.23 | 12 | 1.64 |
MACE, major adverse cardiovascular events, defined as a composite of nonfatal myocardial infarction, nonfatal stroke, nonfatal systemic embolic events, and cardiovascular death.
Final risk factor and exposure‐response models for efficacy endpoints
| Final warfarin risk factor model | Final edoxaban exposure‐response model | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parameter | Estimate [90% CI] | HR | Estimate [90% CI] | HR | |
| Recurrent DVT | |||||
| λ [day−1] | 2.99·10−4 [2.18·10−4, 3.80·10−4] | ‐ | 2.62·10−6 [‐4.26·10−6, 9.50·10−6] | ‐ | |
| γ | −0.0137 [0.0169, −0.0105] | ‐ | 0.373 [0.297, 0.449] | ‐ | |
|
| ‐ | ‐ | −0.0218 [−0.0345, −0.00915] | 0.980 | |
| Recurrent DVT + nonfatal PE | |||||
| λ [day−1] | 2.82·10−4 [2.02·10−4, 3.63·10−4] | ‐ | 2.302·10−7 [−6.83·10−7, 1.14·10−6] | ‐ | |
| γ | −0.0147 [−0.0182, −0.0112] | ‐ | 0.3576 [0.273, 0.443] | ‐ | |
|
| ‐ | ‐ | −0.01364 [−0.0303, 3.04·10−3] | 0.987 | |
|
| ‐ | ‐ | −0.00905 [−0.0244, 6.26·10−3] | ||
| Recurrent DVT + nonfatal PE + all‐cause mortality | |||||
| λ [day−1] | 3.65·10−4 [2.77·10−4, 4.53·10−4] | ‐ | 3.21·10−6 [−4.00·10−6, 1.04·10−5] | ‐ | |
| γ | −0.0133 [−0.0161, −0.0105] | ‐ | 0.398 [0.327, 0.469] | ‐ | |
|
| ‐ | ‐ | −0.0161 [−0.0276, −4.68·10−3] | 0.980 | |
λ, scale factor of the exponential, Weibull, or Gompertz distribution; γ, shape factor of the Weibull or Gompertz distribution; β, coefficient describing risk factor; CI, confidence interval; CRCL, creatinine clearance; DVT, deep vein thrombosis; ER, exposure response; HR, hazard ratio; PE, pulmonary embolism; VTE, venous thromboembolism.
aBased on warfarin patients.
bBased on edoxaban patients.
cEstimates of risk factor effects parameterized as log hazard ratio, and CI obtained from the observed Fisher information matrix.
dDecrease in the hazard ratio with every 1 ng/mL of Cav of edoxaban.
Final risk factor and exposure‐response models for safety endpoints
| Final warfarin risk factor model | Final edoxaban exposure‐response model | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parameter | Estimate [90% CI] | HR | Estimate [90% CI] | HR | |
| Clinically relevant bleeding | |||||
| λ [day−1] | 3.24·10−5 [1.83·10−5, 4.65·10−5] | ‐ | 3.05·10−5 [1.62·10−5, 4.48·10−5] | ‐ | |
| γ | 0.553 [0.511, 0.595] | ‐ | 0.629 [0.577, 0.681] | ‐ | |
|
| 0.320 [0.110, 0.531] | 1.38 | 0.305 [0.076, 0.534] | 1.36 | |
|
| 0.458 [0.244, 0.672] | 1.58 | 0.762 [0.547, 0.978] | 2.14 | |
|
| 0.474 [0.216, 0.732] | 1.61 | 0.110 [−0.222, 0.442] | 1.12 | |
|
| 0.465 [0.278, 0.653] | 1.59 | 0.168 [−0.0557, 0.392] | 1.18 | |
|
| 0.612 [0.206, 1.02] | 1.84 | 0.794 [0.309, 1.28] | 2.21 | |
|
| 0.317 [0.123, 0.511] | 1.37 | 0.395 [0.186, 0.604] | 1.48 | |
|
| 0.244 [0.0815, 0.407] | 1.28 | 0.678 [0.497, 0.859] | 1.97 | |
| All death | |||||
| λ [day−1] | 8.605·10−5 [4.703·10−5, 1.251·10−4] | ‐ | 3.15·10−5 [−6.37·10−6, 1.27·10−5] | ‐ | |
| γ | −0.01059 [−0.01500, −0.006177] | ‐ | 0.458 [0.327, 0.590] | ‐ | |
|
| 1.619 [0.6194, 2.619] | 5.048 | 1.49 [0.485, 2.49] | 4.42 | |
|
| ‐ | ‐ | −0.00865 [−0.0139, −0.00337] | 0.991 | |
| MACE | |||||
| λ [day−1] | 3.44·10−5 [2.22·10−5, 4.67·10−5] | ‐ | 4.16·10−6 [−2.435·10−6, 1.08·10−5] | ‐ | |
| γ | 0.685 [0.531, 0.840] | ‐ | |||
|
| 0.9363 [0.327, 1.55] | 2.551 | 1.25 [0.747, 1.75] | 3.49 | |
|
| 1.10 [0.484, 1.72] | 3.016 | ‐ | ‐ | |
|
| −0.673 [−1.25, −0.0973] | 0.510 | ‐ | ‐ | |
λ, scale factor of the exponential, Weibull, or Gompertz distribution; γ, shape factor of the Weibull or Gompertz distribution; β, coefficient describing risk factor; AGE75, age ≥75 at baseline; ASA, concomitant use of aspirin or antiplatelet agent; CAN, history of cancer; CI, confidence interval; ER, exposure response; HR, hazard ratio; PUL, history of pulmonary disease; RCAN, recent active cancer; SEX, female gender; SUR, recent surgery, trauma, or immobilization.
aBased on warfarin patients.
bBased on edoxaban patients.
cEstimates of risk factor effects parameterized as log hazard ratio, and CI obtained from the observed Fisher information matrix.
dDecrease in the hazard ratio with every 1 ng/ml of Cmax of edoxaban.
Figure 1Visual predictive check of edoxaban final exposure‐response model (a) recurrent venous thromboembolism (VTE); (b) composite of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and nonfatal pulmonary embolism (PE); (c) composite of DVT, nonfatal PE, and all‐cause mortality; (d) clinically relevant bleeding; (e) all death; and (f) major adverse clinical event (MACE). Solid line represents the Kaplan–Meier estimate of the observed data, dotted line represents the 95% confidence intervals of the observed data, and the shaded area represents the 95% prediction intervals using the final exposure‐response model for each endpoint.
Figure 2Probability of an event within 1 year/cumulative risk at 1 year vs. edoxaban exposure in a typical edoxaban patient with no risk factors (a) recurrent venous thromboembolism (VTE); (b) composite of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and nonfatal pulmonary embolism (PE); (c) composite of DVT, nonfatal PE, and all‐cause mortality; (d) clinically relevant bleeding; (e) all death; and (f) major adverse clinical event (MACE). Solid line represents the median model prediction given the model parameters. Gray shaded area indicates the 90% confidence interval given the uncertainty in the model parameters. Distributions represent the predicted average concentration (Cav) or maximum/peak concentration (Cmax) in the full‐dose 60 mg (solid lines) and reduced‐dose 30 mg (dashed lines) groups. The distributions (densities) were adjusted to fit the graph for the purpose of illustration.
Figure 3Clinical utility index (CUI) prediction based on cumulative risk of recurrent venous thromboembolism (VTE) and clinically relevant bleeding at 1 year. (a) In a typical edoxaban patient with no risk factors and for three clinical weights of 1:1, 2:1, and 1:2. Horizontal bars represent the 90% prediction interval of edoxaban average concentration (Cav) in patients with 60 mg or 30 mg. The point represents the median edoxaban Cav exposure. (b) In a typical edoxaban patient stratified by one risk factor and for the clinical weight of 1:1. The figure is stratified by no risk factors (No RF); AGE75, age ≥ 75 at baseline; ASA, concomitant use of aspirin or antiplatelet agent; CAN, history of cancer; PUL, history of pulmonary disease; RCAN, recent active cancer; SEX, female gender; or SUR, recent surgery, trauma, or immobilization. The distributions represent the predicted edoxaban Cav in 60 mg (solid lines) and 30 mg (dashed lines) subgroups. The distributions (densities) were adjusted to fit the graph for purpose of illustration.