| Literature DB >> 27578993 |
Ashley Wester1, Avinash K Shetty2.
Abstract
Influenza virus infection is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in children and adults globally. Seasonal epidemics are common due to the rapid virus evolution, whereas the frequent emergence of antigenic variants can result in pandemics and sporadic/endemic avian influenza virus infections. Although annual vaccination is the mainstay for influenza prevention and control, the use of antiviral agents must be considered for treatment and prophylaxis against influenza. Currently available antiviral drugs include neuraminidase inhibitors (NAIs), adamantanes, and a novel polymerase inhibitor (favipiravir). Peramivir is a recently US Food and Drug Administration-approved NAI for the treatment of acute uncomplicated influenza in adults. The chemical structure of peramivir allows it to bind to the influenza neuraminidase with much higher affinity than oseltamivir. Peramivir is effective against a variety of influenza A and B subtypes and has a lower half-maximal inhibitory concentration compared to other NAIs in in vitro studies. Peramivir can be administered intravenously, a route that is favorable for hospitalized, critically ill patients with influenza. The long half-life of peramivir allows for once-daily dosing. The drug is eliminated primarily by the kidneys, warranting dose adjustments in patients with renal dysfunction. Studies have assessed the clinical efficacy of peramivir for treatment of pandemic influenza A (H1N1). Although anecdotal evidence supports the use of peramivir in pediatric patients, pregnant women, and hospitalized patients with severe influenza receiving continuous renal replacement therapy and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, well-designed, controlled clinical trials should be conducted in order to assess its clinical efficacy in these patient populations.Entities:
Keywords: efficacy; influenza; peramavir; pharmacokinetics; review; safety
Year: 2016 PMID: 27578993 PMCID: PMC5001662 DOI: 10.2147/IDR.S86460
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Drug Resist ISSN: 1178-6973 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Chemical structure of peramivir.
PK parameters after a single dose of peramivir
| PK parameter | Value in adult with normal renal function |
|---|---|
| Route | Intravenous |
| Dose | 600 mg |
| Kinetics | Linear |
| Protein binding | <30% |
| 46,800 ng/mL | |
| AUC0–∞ | 102,700 ng∙h/mL |
| Plasma | Approximately 20 hours |
| 12.56 L | |
| Metabolism | Minimal |
| Excretion | Renal (90%) |
| Dose adjustment for renal insufficiency | Yes |
| Dose adjustment for hepatic insufficiency | No |
Abbreviations: PK, pharmacokinetic; max, maximum; AUC, area under the curve; Vd, volume of distribution; Cmax, maximum serum concentration.
In vitro neuraminidase inhibitor activity against influenza A and B viruses
| Study | Virus | Duration | N | Oseltamivir IC50 (nM) | Zanamivir IC50 (nM) | Peramivir IC50 (nM) | Laninamivir IC50 (nM) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||||||
| Range | Mean±SD | Range | Mean±SD | Range | Mean±SD | Range | Mean±SD | ||||
| Dapat et al | A(H1N1) pdm09 | 2009–2010 | 57 | 1.48–10.91 | 1.88±0.25 | 0.49–1.92 | 0.69±0.09 | 0.04–0.22 | 0.07±0.01 | 0.16–0.49 | 0.24±0.05 |
| A(H1N1) pdm09 | 2010–2011 | 60 | 0.72–443.95 | 1.37±0.31 | 0.30–1.79 | 0.63±0.14 | 0.07–37.09 | 0.12±0.03 | 0.20–0.66 | 0.27±0.05 | |
| A(H3N2) | 2010–2011 | 59 | 0.46–2.12 | 0.73±0.20 | 0.41–2.66 | 0.63±0.17 | 0.10–0.33 | 0.17±0.04 | 0.30–1.09 | 0.65±0.15 | |
| B | 2010–2011 | 18 | 16.97–59.12 | 27.09±11 | 29.33–92.3 | 53.74±17.25 | 1.22–4.77 | 2.31±0.88 | 4.69–15.23 | 8.44±3.33 | |
| Leang et al | A(H1N1) pdm09 | 2009–2012 | 580 | – | – | – | – | – | 0.17±0.10 | – | 0.27±0.05 |
| A(H3N2) | 2009–2012 | 1,949 | – | – | – | – | – | 0.18±0.08 | – | 0.62±0.05 | |
| B | 2009–2012 | 1,231 | – | – | – | – | – | 0.74±0.33 | – | 3.26±0.26 | |
Note: Data from previous studies.34,35
Abbreviations: IC50, half-maximal inhibitory concentration; SD, standard deviation.
Clinical efficacy of peramivir: randomized controlled trials of IV or IM peramivir in adults
| Study | Location/sponsor/trial ID | Design | Population/sample size | Regimen | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ambulatory patients with acute uncomplicated influenza (normal hosts) | |||||
| BiocrystNCT00419263 | US/Canada/Biocryst | Phase II, randomized, double-blind, placebo- controlled, multicenter | Adults with positive rapid antigen test for influenza | Peramivir 150 mg, 300 mg, or placebo as IM single dose <48 hours of symptom onset | Completed |
| Atiee et al | US, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa/Biocryst | Phase II, randomized, double-blind, placebo- controlled, multicenter | Adults with positive influenza A or B (by RAT) with symptom duration ≤48 hours | Peramivir 600 mg versus placebo as IM single dose | Completed |
| Kohno et al | Japan/Shionogi/0722T0621 | Phase II, randomized, double-blind, placebo- controlled multicenter | Adults aged 20–64 years with influenza symptoms and positive influenza A or B (by RAT) | Peramivir 300 or 600 mg IV single dose versus placebo <48 hours of onset of symptoms | Completed (n=300, n=296 efficacy analyses) |
| Kohno et al | Japan/Shionogi/0815T0631 | Phase III, randomized, double-blind, double-dummy, controlled, multicenter | Adults aged ≥20 years with influenza symptoms and positive influenza A or B (by RAT) | Peramivir 300 mg or 600 mg IV single dose versus oral oseltamivir 75 mg BID ×5 days | Completed |
| High-risk ambulatory patients with acute uncomplicated influenza | |||||
| Kohno et al | Japan/Shionogi/0816T0632 | Phase III, randomized, double-blind, uncontrolled, multicenter | High-risk patients with influenza symptoms and positive influenza A or B (by RAT) | Peramivir 300 or 600 mg IV ×1–5 days | Completed |
| Hospitalized patients with influenza | |||||
| Ison et al | US, Australia, Canada, Hong Kong, New Zealand, Singapore, South Africa/Biocryst/NCT00453999 | Phase II, randomized, double-blind, double dummy, placebo- controlled, multicenter | Hospitalized patients with acute or potentially life- threatening influenza | Peramivir 200, 400 mg, or placebo IV QD ×5 days plus either oseltamivir oral suspension or placebo 75 mg BID ×5 days | Completed |
| Hernandez et al | USA, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Mexico, Puerto Rico/Biocryst & US DHHS/NCT00957996 | Phase III, randomized, open-label | Hospitalized adults and adolescents (14–92 years) with confirmed or suspected 2009 pandemic influenza (H1N1) | Peramivir 300 mg IV BID or 600 mg IV QD | Completed |
| de Jong et al | North and South America, Europe, South Africa/Biocryst & US DHHS/NCT00958776 | Phase III, randomized, double-blind, controlled, multicenter | Hospitalized adolescents and adults (≥12 years) who have suspected or confirmed influenza as shown by positive influenza A/B RAT | Peramivir + SOC versus SOC + placebo without NAI; peramivir + SOC versus placebo + SOC with NAI; adults: peramivir 600 mg IV QD; adolescents: peramivir 10 mg/kg (max. 600 mg) QD | Terminated during preplanned interim analysis for futility (n=338) |
Abbreviations: BID, two times a day; CI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio; IM, intramuscular; IV, intravenous; NAIs, neuraminidase inhibitors; QD, every day; RAT, rapid antigen test; SOC, standard of care.
Other clinical studies of peramivir in influenza infection in adult and pediatric patients
| Study | Design | Population/sample size | Regimen | Results/conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adults | ||||
| Yoshino et al | Retrospective cohort | Adults >18 years of age hospitalized from October 2012 to March 2013; n=32 | Peramivir 300 mg IV once (or adjusted for renal dysfunction or severity) versus oral oseltamivir 75 mg BID for 5 days | n=23 in peramivir group, n=9 in oseltamivir group |
| Ison et al | Open-label, randomized trial | Hospitalized patients ≥6 years of age; n=234 | Peramivir 300 mg IV twice daily versus peramivir 600 mg IV once daily for adults ≥18 years or 5 mg/kg twice daily versus 10 mg/kg once daily for children and adolescents | Viral titers declined similarly without difference between regimens; no significant differences in virologic endpoints between arms |
| Children | ||||
| Sugaya et al | Multicenter, open-label, uncontrolled trial | Hospitalized children age ≥28 days to <16 years with influenza infection during the 2009 pandemic A (H1N1) epidemic; n=106 | Peramivir IV 10 mg/kg (max. 600 mg) once daily | Median time to alleviation of symptoms was 29.1 hours (95% CI, 22.1–32.4 hours) Concluded that peramivir is clinically and virologically effective and safe in children with pH1N1 virus infection |
| Shobugawa et al | Observational trial | Outpatient pediatric patients; n=263; oseltamivir = 104, peramivir = 4; patients treated with peramivir were age 8.8±3.9 years | Peramivir IV 10 mg/kg (max. 600 mg) as a single dose; oseltamivir 150 mg per day divided BID for children >37.5 kg or 4 mg/kg per day divided BID for children <37.5 kg | Peramivir group had the fastest time to fever alleviation of all groups (median 17.0 hours; 95% CI, 7.2–26.8 hours); result was statistically significant compared to oseltamivir group ( |
| Hikita et al | Retrospective chart review | Outpatient pediatric patients aged 0–18 years; total n=223 | Peramivir IV 10 mg/kg (max. 300 mg) once daily | In influenza A patients aged 5–18 years, median fever duration with peramivir was shorter at 1 day compared to that of zanamivir at 2 days ( |
| Critically ill patients (adults and children) | ||||
| Sorbello et al | Retrospective chart review of adverse events reported during the EUA | Hospitalized patients aged <1 to 90 years; n=344 | Not described, median duration of peramivir was 5 days | The only treatment-emergent adverse event found to be attributable to peramivir was rash |
| Louie et al | Retrospective comparative analysis of critically ill patients who received peramivir versus critically ill patients treated with other neuraminidase inhibitors | Hospitalized patients with A(H1N1)pdm09 infection aged 5 months to 81 years; n=57 patients who received peramivir | Not described | Twenty-nine (51%) patients treated with peramivir died |
Abbreviations: BID, twice daily; CI, confidence interval; EUA, emergency use authorization; IV, intravenous.
Safety summary for peramivir
| Commonly reported adverse events |
| • Gastrointestinal: diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, constipation |
| • Neurologic: insomnia |
| • Cardiovascular: hypertension |
| Contraindications |
| • No contraindications in manufacturer labeling |
| Warnings and precautions |
| • Serious skin/hypersensitivity reactions: erythema multiform and Stevens–Johnsons syndrome are rare but have been reported in postmarketing experience |
| • Neuropsychiatric events: delirium and abnormal behavior have been reported but appear to be uncommon; of note, these events may be related to encephalitis or encephalopathy experienced by influenza patients regardless of treatment status |
| • Risk of bacterial infections: peramivir has not been shown to prevent the development of influenza-associated bacterial infections |
| Laboratory abnormalities in ≥2% of subjects |
| • Alanine aminotransferase elevation (>2.5× ULN) |
| • Serum glucose elevation (>160 mg/dL) |
| • Creatine phosphokinase elevation (≥6.0× ULN) |
| • Neutrophil reduction (<1.000×109/L) |
| Recommended monitoring |
| • Renal function assessment |
| • Vital signs |
| • Liver function tests |
| • Complete blood count |
| • Urinalysis if clinically indicated |
Note: Data from previous research.63
Abbreviation: ULN, upper limit of normal.