| Literature DB >> 30038039 |
Ali Mohamed Ali1,2,3, Melissa A Penny1,2, Thomas A Smith1,2, Lesley Workman4,5, Philip Sasi6, George O Adjei7,8, Francesca Aweeka9, Jean-René Kiechel10, Vincent Jullien11, Marcus J Rijken12, Rose McGready12,13, Julia Mwesigwa14,15, Kim Kristensen16, Kasia Stepniewska13,17, Joel Tarning13,17,18, Karen I Barnes4,5, Paolo Denti19.
Abstract
Amodiaquine plus artesunate is the recommended antimalarial treatment in many countries where malaria is endemic. However, pediatric doses are largely based on a linear extrapolation from adult doses. We pooled data from previously published studies on the pharmacokinetics of amodiaquine, to optimize the dose across all age groups. Adults and children with uncomplicated malaria received daily weight-based doses of amodiaquine or artesunate-amodiaquine over 3 days. Plasma concentration-time profiles for both the parent drug and the metabolite were characterized using nonlinear mixed-effects modeling. Amodiaquine pharmacokinetics were adequately described by a two-compartment disposition model, with first-order elimination leading to the formation of desethylamodiaquine, which was best described by a three-compartment disposition model. Body size and age were the main covariates affecting amodiaquine clearance. After adjusting for the effect of weight, clearance rates for amodiaquine and desethylamodiaquine reached 50% of adult maturation at 2.8 months (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.5 to 3.7 months) and 3.9 months (95% CI, 2.6 to 5.3 months) after birth, assuming that the baby was born at term. Bioavailability was 22.4% (95% CI, 15.6 to 31.9%) lower at the start of treatment than during convalescence, which suggests a malaria disease effect. Neither the drug formulation nor the hemoglobin concentration had an effect on any pharmacokinetic parameters. Results from simulations showed that current manufacturer dosing recommendations resulted in low desethylamodiaquine exposure in patients weighing 8 kg, 15 to 17 kg, 33 to 35 kg, and >62 kg compared to that in a typical 50-kg patient. We propose possible optimized dosing regimens to achieve similar drug exposures among all age groups, which require further validation.Entities:
Keywords: NONMEM; dose optimization; malaria; pediatrics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30038039 PMCID: PMC6153844 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.02193-17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Agents Chemother ISSN: 0066-4804 Impact factor: 5.191
Patient characteristics at baseline
| Characteristic | Value(s) for the following study(ies): | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tarning and colleagues ( | Jullien et al. ( | Mwesigwa et al. ( | Stepniewska et al. ( | Adjei et al. ( | Total | |
| No. of patients | 26 (+7) | 53 | 20 | 61 | 101 | 261 |
| % of male patients (no. of male patients/total no. of patients) | 0 (0/26) | 47.2 (25/53) | 65.0 (13/20) | 54.1 (33/61) | 50.5 (51/101) | 46.7 (122/261) |
| Median (range) age (yr) | 23.0 (16.0–39.0) | 24.0 (18.0–60.0) | 9.0 (6.0–13.0) | 2.5 (1.0–5.0) | 6.0 (1.0–14.0) | 7.6 (1.0–60.0) |
| % of patients aged (yr) (no. of patients of the indicated age/total no. of patients): | ||||||
| <2 | 0 (0/26) | 0 (0/53) | 0 (0/20) | 32.8 (20/61) | 12.9 (13/101) | 12.6 (33/261) |
| 2 to <5 | 0 (0/26) | 0 (0/53) | 0 (0/20) | 65.6 (40/61) | 21.8 (22/101) | 23.8 (62/261) |
| 5 to <12 | 0 (0/26) | 0 (0/53) | 90.0 (18/20) | 1.6 (1/61) | 53.5 (54/101) | 28.0 (73/261) |
| 12+ | 100 (26/26) | 100 (53/53) | 10.0 (2/20) | 0 (0/61) | 11.9 (12/101) | 34.6 (93/261) |
| % of patients receiving the following drug formulation, treatment regimen (no. of patients receiving the formulation, regimen/total no.): | ||||||
| AQ + AS, FDC | 0 (0/26) | 47 (25/53) | 0 (0/20) | 47.5 (29/61) | 0 (0/101) | 20.7 (54/261) |
| AQ + AS, separate tablets | 0 (0/26) | 53 (28/53) | 100 (20/20) | 52.5 (32/61) | 85.2 (86/101) | 63.6 (166/261) |
| AQ alone | 100 (26/26) | 0 (0/53) | 0 (0/20) | 0 (0/61) | 14.8 (15/101) | 15.7 (41/261) |
| Enrollment demographic, vital, and laboratory parameters | ||||||
| Median (range) wt (kg) | 49.0 (37.0–68.0) | 59.0 (39.0–90.0) | 24.5 (20.0–42.0) | 12.5 (7.0–31.0) | 18.0 (6.5–93.0) | 21.0 (6.5–93.0) |
| Median (range) total dose (mg/kg) | 30.5 (28.1–63.0) | 29.5 (18.0–47.1) | 24.3 (23.9–26.0) | 33.7 (14.8–65.6) | 30.0 (30.0–30.0) | 30.0 (14.8–65.6) |
| Geometric mean (range) parasitemia (no. of parasites/μl) | 1,142 (96–50,453) | 11,923 (1,127–109,356) | 11,122 (240–174,800) | 23,110 (1,357–467,600) | 42,689 (630–566,358) | 17,952 (96–566,358) |
| Median (range) hematocrit (%) | 32.5 (23.0–40.0) | 32.5 (23.0–40.0) | ||||
| Median (range) hemoglobin concn (g/dl) | 10.3 (6.7–13.2) | 13.2 (9.9–17.7) | 12.2 (9.7–14.1) | 8.7 (5.9–12.4) | 11.6 (6.5–15.1) | 11.2 (5.9–17.7) |
Percentages can be more than 100% due to rounding errors. AQ, amodiaquine; AS, artesunate; FDC, fixed-dose combination.
Seven patients were sampled again after delivery, during another episode of malaria.
The data are for patients with vivax malaria.
Derived on the basis of their hematocrit value.
Descriptions of population pharmacokinetic and noncompartmental studies
| Country | Study description (authors [reference(s)]) | Treatment (protocol) | Study population | Formulation | Manufacturer | No. of patients | Sampling schedule (protocol) | Sample collection | Sample storage and assay | No. of samples per patient | LLOQ of AQ/DEAQ concn (ng/ml) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thailand | Effect of pregnancy on PK and PD of amodiaquine and desethylamodiaquine (Tarning and colleagues [ | AQ (10 mg/kg) daily for 3 days, 200 mg amodiaquine hydrochloride (153 mg amodiaquine base) | Pregnant women (ages, 16 to 39 yr) in their 2nd and 3rd trimester (with follow-up after delivery) | AQ alone | Sanofi-Aventis, France | 26 (7) | 0, 4, 24, 28, 48, 48.5, 49, 50, 51, 52, 54, 56, 58, and 72 h; 4, 5, 7, 14, 21, 28, 35, and 42 days | A sample was drawn from a catheter during the first 3 days and thereafter by venous puncture and placed into lithium heparin tubes | Samples were stored at −20°C and analyzed by LC-MS/MS | 14/22 (14/22) | 1/2 |
| Kenya | Efficacy of fixed vs nonfixed dose of ASAQ (Jullien et al. [ | Two tablets of AS-AQ at a fixed dose (100/270 mg) or 4 tablets of AS (50 mg) + 4 tablets of AQ (153 mg) daily for 3 days, 353/200 mg amodiaquine hydrochloride (153/270 mg amodiaquine base) | Adults (ages, 18 to 60 yr) | AS + AQ at a fixed dose and as a loose formulation | Sanofi-Aventis, France | 53 | Before 1st dose, 15 min to 4 h after 1st dose, 15 min to 4 h after 2nd dose, just before 3rd dose, 15 min to 4 h after 3rd dose, days 7, 14, 21, and 28 | Samples were analyzed by HPLC | 4/8 | 1/1 | |
| Uganda | Determine PK parameters for AS and AQ in children (Mwesigwa et al. [ | AS (50-mg tablets at 4 mg/kg twice a day for 3 days) + AQ (200-mg tablets at 10 mg/kg once a day on the first 2 days and 5 mg/kg on the third day), 200 mg amodiaquine hydrochloride (153 mg amodiaquine base) | Children (ages, 5 to 13 yr) | AS + AQ, loose formulation | Sanofi-Aventis, France | 20 | Just prior to 3rd dose and at 2, 4, 8, 24, and 120 h after 3rd dose | A venous sample was drawn into potassium oxalate-sodium fluoride tubes | Samples were stored at −80°C and analyzed by LC-MS/MS | 2/6 | 5/5 |
| Burkina Faso | Compare bioavailability of fixed doses of AS and AQ vs AS and AQ separately (Stepniewska et al. [ | AS-AQ at a fixed dose (one dose of 25/67.5 mg/kg for children <12 mo of age or two doses for children ages 12 to 60 mo) or AS (50-mg tablet, a half tablet for children <12 mo of age and one tablet for children ages 12 to 60 mo) + AQ (153 mg, a half tablet for children <12 mo of age and one tablet for children ages 12 to 60 mo) daily for 3 days, 200 mg amodiaquine hydrochloride (153 mg amodiaquine base) | Children (ages, 1 to 5 yr) | AS + AQ at a fixed dose and as a loose formulation | Sanofi-Aventis, France | 61 | Before the 1st dose, 4 h after the 3rd dose, and then at days 7 and 14 and days 21 and 28 | A venous sample was collected in lithium heparin tubes | Samples were stored at −20°C and analyzed by LC-MS/MS | 2/3 | 1/1 |
| Ghana | Compare the effect of AS on AQ (comparison between AQ and loose formulations of AS and AQ) (Adjei et al. [ | AQ (10-mg/kg single dose) or AS (4-mg/kg single dose) + AQ (10-mg/kg single dose) daily for 3 days, 200 mg amodiaquine hydrochloride (153 mg amodiaquine base) | Children (ages, 1 to 14 yr) | AS + AQ, loose formulation | Pfizer, Dakar, Senegal | 101 | Before the dose on days 3 and 7 | A venous sample was collected into heparinized polypropylene tubes | Samples were stored at −20°C and analyzed by HPLC | 1/2 | 10/10 |
All samples were venous plasma. AS, artesunate; AQ, amodiaquine; LLOQ, lower limit of quantification; DEAQ, desethylamodiaquine; LC-MS/MS, liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry; HPLC, reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography.
Median number of amodiaquine/desethylamodiaquine samples per subject; values in parentheses are for the same women at 3 months postdelivery.
Population PK study.
The same women were sampled again at 3 months postdelivery during another malaria episode.
Noncompartmental pharmacokinetic analysis.
FIG 1Structure of the PK model of amodiaquine and desethylamodiaquine. Abbreviations: F, oral bioavailability; KTR, first-order transit rate constant; K, absorption rate constant; AQ, amodiaquine; DEAQ, desethylamodiaquine; CL, clearance; Vc, central volume of distribution; Q, Q1, and Q2, intercompartmental clearances; Vp, Vp1, and Vp2, peripheral volumes of distribution.
Parameter estimates of the population pharmacokinetic model for amodiaquine and desethylamodiaquine
| Drug and parameter | Typical value | BSV or BOV | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Value (% RSE) | 95% CI | BSV (% RSE) | BOV (% RSE) | % shrinkage | 95% CI | ||
| Eta | Epsilon | ||||||
| Amodiaquine | |||||||
| | 0.589 (23) | 0.409, 0.905 | 78.5 (12) | 41.7 | 62.0, 96.5 | ||
| MTT (h) | 0.236 (26) | 0.161, 0.334 | 93.4 (16) | 61.8 | 60.6, 120 | ||
| NN | 2.00 (78) | 1.09, 6.31 | |||||
| | 1 Fixed | 30.9 (8.0) | 27.1 | 26.5, 36.0 | |||
| CLAQ | 2,960 (4.4) | 2,600, 3,118 | 32.2 (13) | 44.3 | 24.2, 39.5 | ||
| | 13,500 (19) | 7,423, 17,824 | 53.1 (30) | 55.4 | 19.4, 79.5 | ||
| | 2,310 (9.2) | 1,877, 2,722 | |||||
| | 22,700 (10) | 17,956, 27,114 | |||||
| Additive error | LLOQ/5 + 0.445 (19) | LLOQ/5 + 0.249, 0.609 | 26.7 | ||||
| Proportional error (%) | 19.9 (11) | 16.1, 24.6 | |||||
| Desethylamodiaquine | |||||||
| CLDEAQ | 32.6 (2.9) | 29.7, 33.4 | 20.0 (10) | 31.3 | 15.5, 23.5 | ||
| | 258 (12) | 201, 318 | 67.2 (21) | 59.3 | 36.0, 89.2 | ||
| | 154 (6.6) | 131, 171 | |||||
| | 2,460 (5.9) | 2,129, 2,677 | |||||
| | 31.3 (6.2) | 26.8, 34.3 | |||||
| | 5,580 (4.3) | 4,968, 5,904 | |||||
| Additive error | LLOQ/5 Fixed | 16.5 | |||||
| Proportional error (%) | 24.2 (4.0) | 22.2, 25.9 | |||||
| Covariate effects | |||||||
| PMA50 for AQ | 11.8 (4.6) | 10.50, 12.70 | |||||
| Hill factor for AQ | 3.6 (4.0) | 3.23, 3.80 | |||||
| PMA50 for DEAQ | 12.9 (5.7) | 11.60, 14.30 | |||||
| Hill factor for DEAQ | 3.22 (4.7) | 2.85, 3.43 | |||||
| Effect of first dose on | −22.4 (19) | −32.0, −15.6 | |||||
The precision of the parameter estimates was assessed using a nonparametric bootstrap of the final model (n = 500). The relative standard errors were calculated as 100 × (standard deviation/mean), while the confidence intervals were obtained on the basis of the empirical percentiles of the bootstrap estimates.
Between-subject and between-occasion variability were assumed to be log-normally distributed and are reported as the approximate percent coefficient of variation.
All clearances and volumes of distribution refer to a patient weighing 50 kg, the median weight in the data set.
For the data contributed by each study, the additive error was fixed to 20% of the lower limit of quantification (LLOQ) in that study plus an estimated parameter. For desethylamodiaquine, this extra parameter was not significantly different from zero, so the additive error was fixed to the lower bound of LLOQ/5.
Estimated using prior functionality in NONMEM.
Abbreviations: AQ, amodiaquine; DEAQ, desethylamodiaquine; BSV, between-subject variability; BOV, between-occasion variability; RSE, relative standard error; K, absorption rate constant; MTT, mean transit time; NN, number of transit compartments; F, relative bioavailability; CL, clearance; Vc, central volume of distribution; Q, Q1, and Q2, intercompartmental clearances; Vp, Vp1, and Vp2, peripheral volumes of distribution; PMA50, time to reach 50% of clearance maturation; Hill factor, steepness of the clearance maturation curve.
FIG 2Visual predictive check of the final model describing the plasma concentrations of amodiaquine (AQ) and desethylamodiaquine (DEAQ) versus time in uncomplicated malaria patients from Thailand (THA), Kenya (KEN), Uganda (UGA), Burkina Faso (BKF), and Ghana (GHA). Open circles are the observed data points; solid and dashed lines are the 50th, 5th, and 95th percentiles of the observed data; shaded areas are the simulated (n = 1,000) 95% confidence interval for the same percentile. The y axis represents the plasma concentration on the log scale. Censored data points below the lower limit of quantification were imputed as LLOQ/2 and included in the calculation of percentiles for the observed and the simulation data. The VPC for amodiaquine for both Thailand and Kenya was cut at times of 90 and 60 h, respectively, since beyond these times the concentrations from both observed and simulated data were below the LLOQ.
FIG 3Clearance maturation for amodiaquine (red line) and desethylamodiaquine (blue line) expressed as a fraction of adult clearance predicted from the PK model plotted against postnatal age (assuming that birth occurred at term). The dashed lines indicate the section of the maturation curve that falls in the age range below that observed in the study data and are therefore based on an extrapolation.
FIG 4Simulation results of current recommended and optimized dose regimens for amodiaquine. (A and C) Day 7 plasma desethylamodiaquine concentration (A) and maximum concentration of desethylamodiaquine (C) based on the current recommended dose regimen. (B and D) Predicted desethylamodiaquine day 7 concentration for the optimized dose regimen designed to achieve a concentration ≥75% above the threshold value (B) and Cmax of desethylamodiaquine for the optimized dose regimen (D). The black dashed and solid lines in panels A and B are the median and 80% value of median of the simulated day 7 plasma desethylamodiaquine concentration for the typical patient (representing the expected exposure level from the current dosing recommendation), respectively, and the red lines in panels C and D represents the Cmax upper threshold (575 ng/ml). Simulations for each weight are presented as a box plot for the median and 25th and 75th percentiles, with whiskers representing the 5th and 95th percentiles. The boxes in gray indicate that the simulation for that age range is based on an extrapolation, since no PK data for children of that age were available.
Current dose regimen and optimized dose regimen based on simulations for amodiaquine
| Current manufacturer dose regimen | Proposed dose regimen | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Body wt (kg) | No. of tablets/day, tablet strength | Total amodiaquine dose (mg) | Body wt (kg) | No. of tablets/day, tablet strength (mg) | Total amodiaquine dose (mg) |
| 4 to 8 | 1, 67.5 | 67.5 | 4 to 6 | 1, 67.5 | 67.5 |
| 9 to 17 | 1, 135 | 135 | 7 to 10 | 1, 135 | 135 |
| 18 to 35 | 1, 270 | 270 | 11 to 16 | 1.5, 135 | 202.5 |
| ≥36 | 2, 270 | 540 | 17 to 28 | 2.5, 135 | 337.5 |
| 29 to 49 | 2, 270 | 540 | |||
| ≥50 | 3, 270 | 810 | |||
A substantial number of simulated patients (78%) in this weight band were younger (<1 year) than those available in the data set.
A proportion of the simulated patients (38%) in this weight band were younger (<1 year) than those available in the data set.
In these weight bands, as an alternative to splitting tablets, one could suggest using tablets of different strengths. Either option is viable, according to the preference of the caregiver.