| Literature DB >> 28526056 |
Abstract
Tafenoquine (TQ) is an 8-aminoquinoline anti-malarial being developed for malaria prophylaxis. It has been generally assumed that TQ, administered prophylactically, acts primarily on the developing exoerythrocytic stages of malaria parasites (causal prophylaxis), and that polymorphisms in metabolic enzymes thought to impact the activity of other 8-aminoquinolines also inhibit this property of TQ. Furthermore, it has been suggested that a diagnostic test for CYP2D6 metabolizer status might be required. In field studies in which metabolic status was not an exclusion criteria, TQ has been shown to exhibit similar prophylactic efficacy as blood schizonticidal drugs (mefloquine). Also, its blood schizonticidal and anti-relapse efficacy is independent of 2D6 metabolizer status. The most reasonable explanation for the field study results, supported by other clinical and non-clinical data, is that TQ is not completely causal and exhibits substantial blood schizonticidal activity at the intended dose. Pharmacokinetic simulations demonstrate that trough concentrations of TQ exceed the proposed MIC of 80 ng/ml in >95% of individuals. Based on these data a companion diagnostic for CP450 enzyme status is not required.Entities:
Keywords: Antimalarial drug; Asexual blood stages; Blood schizonticide; Malaria; Plasmodium falciparum; Plasmodium vivax; Primaquine; Tafenoquine
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28526056 PMCID: PMC5438551 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-017-1862-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1Plasma-concentration time curves for selected regimens of tafenoquine. Plasma-concentration time curves for tafenoquine generated from pharmacokinetic simulations at doses of 200 mg (a) and 100 mg (b) administered once per day for 3 days (load) then once per week for a simulated deployment of 6 months. Median trough concentrations exceed the putative MIC of 80 ng/ml for both regimens, but trough levels for the 200 mg dose exceed the MIC in 95% of subjects. The simulations utilized pharmacokinetic parameters from a US Army study [16] which were derived from modeling of data from eleven published and unpublished pharmacokinetic studies
Summary of key concentration-related pharmacodynamic endpoints for tafenoquine
| Actual or estimated concentration parameter of interest (ng/ml) | Regimen | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.6, 2 and 6 mg/kg/day × 3 against Pc in Rhesus monkeys [ | 1 and 3 mg/kg/day × 3 against Pv in Aotus monkeys [ | 600 mg × 1 in nonimmune patients [ | 200 mg/day × 3 + 200 mg once per week in nonimmune and semi-immune subjects (see also Fig. | 100 mg/day × 3 + 100 mg once per week (hypothetical) (see also Fig. | 400 mg/day × 3 + 400 mg once per month in Thai soldiers [ | |
| Cmax | 50, 150 and 500 | ~90 and 250 | 400 | 280 | 140 | 730 |
| Steady state trough (median) | NA | NA | NA | 220 | 110 | Month 1–238b
|
| Steady state trough (5%) | NA | NA | NA | 90 | 45 | NA |
| Steady state Cmax | NA | NA | NA | 320 | 160 | ~350–500 |
| Major pharmacologic effects and/or concentration at failure or relapse | 2 and 6 mg/kg cleared established infection, no recrudescense at 6 mg/kg | 1 and 3 mg/kg cleared established infection, no recrudescence at 3 mg/kg | Pf = 49 at day 31, Cmax in failed subject was 244 ng/ml | No Pf or Pv failures during deployment in non-immunes with 4 post-deployment Pv relapses—concentration unknown | NA | Pv = 20, 21 and Pf = 39 at 6–12 weeks after dosing |
| In vitro parameters | IC50 97 in 44 MDR Pf strains from Thai/Cambodian border [ | |||||
C maximum concentration, MDR multidrug resistant, NA not available, NR not reported, Pv Plasmodium vivax, Pf Plasmodium falciparum, Pc Plasmodium cynomolgi, HED human equivalent dose assuming a 65 kg subject
aHED calculated assumed conversion factor 0.916 from a mg/kg dose in monkeys to a mg dose in a 65 kg human. The conversion factor was derived based on an observed median Cmax of 50 ng/ml in Rhesus monkeys at a dose 0f 0.6 mg/kg/day for 3 days versus a simulated Cmax of 280 ng/ml following a 200 mg × 3 loading dose in a 65 kg human and assuming Cmax scales linearly with dose. The same conversion factor between Rhesus monkeys and humans was assumed for Aotus monkeys
bNot at steady state; trough concentrations declined