| Literature DB >> 30509294 |
Joyson J Karakunnel1, Nam Bui2, Latha Palaniappan3, Keith T Schmidt4, Kenneth W Mahaffey5, Briggs Morrison6, William D Figg4, Shivaani Kummar2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: With the exception of genotoxic oncology drugs, first-in-human, Phase 1 clinical studies of investigational drugs have traditionally been conducted in healthy volunteers (HVs). The primary goal of these studies is to investigate the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of a novel drug candidate, determine appropriate dosing, and document safety and tolerability. MAIN BODY: When tailored to specific study objectives, HV studies are beneficial to manufacturers and patients alike and can be applied to both non-oncology and oncology drug development. Enrollment of HVs not only increases study accrual rates for dose-escalation studies but also alleviates the ethical concern of enrolling patients with disease in a short-term study at subtherapeutic doses when other studies (e.g. Phase 2 or Phase 3 studies) may be more appropriate for the patient. The use of HVs in non-oncology Phase 1 clinical trials is relatively safe but nonetheless poses ethical challenges because of the potential risks to which HVs are exposed. In general, most adverse events associated with non-oncology drugs are mild in severity, and serious adverse events are rare, but examples of severe toxicity have been reported. The use of HVs in the clinical development of oncology drugs is more limited but is nonetheless useful for evaluating clinical pharmacology and establishing an appropriate starting dose for studies in cancer patients. During the development of oncology drugs, clinical pharmacology studies in HVs have been used to assess pharmacokinetics, drug metabolism, food effects, potential drug-drug interactions, effects of hepatic and renal impairment, and other pharmacologic parameters vital for clinical decision-making in oncology. Studies in HVs are also being used to evaluate biosimilars versus established anticancer biologic agents.Entities:
Keywords: Bioequivalence; First-in-human; Healthy volunteer; Medical ethics; Pharmacodynamic; Pharmacokinetic; Phase 1; Safety; Toxicity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30509294 PMCID: PMC6278009 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-018-1710-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Fig. 1General design of healthy volunteer studies. CRU Clinical Research Unit
Selected trials of non-oncology drugs in healthy volunteers.
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov
| NCT number | Treatment | Target/MOA | Study design | Outcomes | Enrolled (N) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Completed clinical trials | |||||
| NCT01396161 | PF-05175157 | Acetyl-CoA carboxylase inhibitor | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled | PK, safety | 64 |
| NCT00741026 | Olanzapine | Muscarinic (M3) receptor antagonist | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled | PK, safety | 15 |
| NCT00894322 | Exenatide | GLP-1 receptor agonist | Randomized, single-blind | PK, safety | 65 |
| NCT01380730 | Evolocumab | PCSK9 monoclonal antibody inhibition | Randomized, quadruple-blind, placebo-controlled | PK, safety | 629 |
| NCT00924053 | Bexagliflozin | SGLT-2 inhibitor | Randomized, quadruple-blind, placebo-controlled | PK, safety | 24 |
GLP-1, glucagon-like peptide 1; MOA, mechanism of action; PCSK9, proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9; PK, pharmacokinetics; SGLT-2, sodium–glucose cotransporter-2
Selected trials of oncology drugs in healthy volunteers.
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov
| NCT number | Treatment | Target/MOA | Study design | Outcomes | Study population | Enrolled (N) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Completed clinical trials | ||||||
| NCT00658554 | ARQ 197 | c-MET inhibitor | Randomized, open-label, crossover | PK, safety | Healthy volunteers | 24 |
| NCT02474537 | INC280 (capmatinib) | c-MET inhibitor | Open-label, parallel-group, two-staged, single-dose | PK, safety | Subjects with impaired hepatic function; healthy subjects with normal hepatic function | 31 |
| NCT03154086 | GSK3352589 | RET growth factor receptor TKI | Randomized, double-blind, crossover, placebo-controlled, single- and repeat-dose escalation | Safety, PK | Healthy volunteers | 59 |
| NCT03192111 | Entinostat | HDAC inhibitor | Open-label, parallel-cohort, single-dose | PK, safety, tolerability | Adults subjects with mild, moderate, severe renal impairment; healthy volunteers | 40 |
| NCT00418626 | Nilotinib (AMN107) | TKI | Open-label, single-dose, | PK, impact on hepatic function | Subjects with impaired hepatic function; healthy subjects with normal hepatic function | 27 |
| NCT02388620 | LEE011 (ribociclib) | CDK4/6 inhibitor | Open-label, parallel-cohort, single-dose | PK, safety | Subjects with impaired hepatic function; healthy subjects with normal hepatic function | 30 |
| NCT01764776 | LDE225 (sonidegib) | Smo antagonist | Open-label, single-dose | PK, safety | Subjects with impaired hepatic function; healthy subjects with normal hepatic function | 33 |
| NCT02050815 | MEK162 (binimetinib) | MEK inhibitor | Open-label, single-dose | PK, safety | Subjects with impaired hepatic function; healthy subjects with normal hepatic function | 27 |
| NCT02621047 | Alectinib | ALK inhibitor | Open-label, single-dose, parallel assignment | Effect of hepatic impairment on PK | Subjects with hepatic impairment; healthy subjects with normal hepatic function | 28 |
| NCT01901133 | MDV3100 (enzalutamide) | AR antagonist | Open-label, single-dose, parallel assignment | PK, safety | Male subjects with mild or moderate hepatic impairment; male subjects with normal hepatic function | 33 |
| Ongoing clinical trials | ||||||
| NCT02922946 (not yet recruiting) | Entinostat | HDAC inhibitor | Open-label, randomized, single-dose, crossover | Effect of food on PK | Healthy subjects | 48 |
| NCT02431481 (ongoing) | LEE011 (ribociclib) | CDK4/6 inhibitor | Open-label, parallel-group, single-dose | PK, safety | Subjects with varying degrees of impaired renal function; healthy volunteers with normal renal function | 64 |
| NCT02852239 (ongoing) | Dabrafenib | BRAF inhibitor | Open-label, single-dose | PK, safety | Subjects with impaired renal function; healthy subjects with normal renal function | ~ 32 |
| NCT02852239 (ongoing) | Dabrafenib | BRAF inhibitor | Open-label, single-dose | PK, safety | Subjects with impaired hepatic function; healthy subjects with normal hepatic function | ~ 32 |
ALK, anaplastic lymphoma kinase; AR, androgen receptor; BRAF, v-raf murine sarcoma viral oncogene homolog B1; CDK4/6, cyclin-dependent kinases 4 and 6; HDAC, histone deacetylase; MOA, mechanism of action; PK, pharmacokinetics; TKI, tyrosine kinase inhibitor
Fig. 2Traditional (a) and modified (b) first-in-human study designs. DL dose level, DLT dose-limiting toxicity, G2 grade 2, MAD maximum administered dose, MTD maximum tolerated dose
Selected published trials of oncology drugs in healthy volunteers sorted by study objective
| NCT number, PMID number | Treatment | Target/MOA | Study population/study design | Study objective/study endpoints | Enrolled (N) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mass balance | |||||
| NCT01674322, 25488930 [ | [14C]-Ibrutinib | Bruton tyrosine kinase | Single center, open-label, single-dose study in healthy males | PK of total radioactivity, parent drug and metabolites (plasma, urine, feces) based on CYP2D6 genotype | 6 (2 CYP2D6 poor metabolizer subjects) |
| NCT01711762, 26451002 [ | [14C]-Cobimetinib | MEK inhibitor | Single center, open-label, nonrandomized study in healthy males | PK of total radioactivity, parent drug and metabolites (plasma, urine, feces) | 6 |
| Bioequivalence | |||||
| N/A, 26272586 [ | Ceritinib | ALK inhibitor | Two randomized, open-label, 2-period, crossover studies in healthy subjects | Changes in bioavailability with low- or high-fat meal, or light snack compared to fasting conditions | 40 (28, 12) |
| N/A, 25643050 [ | Erlotinib | EGFR inhibitor | Two single center, open-label, crossover studies (two and three sequence) in healthy subjects | Changes in bioavailability when coadministered with ranitidine or omeprazole | 48 (24 each) |
| N/A, 28776077 [ | Abiraterone Acetate | CYP17 inhibitor | Single center, open-label, fixed treatment sequence, 3-period, single-dose, crossover study in healthy males | Changes in bioavailability with novel formulation under both fasted and fed conditions compared with historical controls | 11 |
| Biosimilarity | |||||
| NCT01603264, 25041377 [ | Trastuzumab (PF-05280014, EU-, or US-approved trastuzumab) | HER2 inhibitor | Single center, double-blind, parallel group, single-dose, 3-arm, active comparator trial in healthy subjects | Establish 3-way clinical PK similarity of PF-05280014 to both EU- and US-trastuzumab formulations, and of EU- to US-trastuzumab | 101 |
| NCT01608087, 28651442 [ | Bevacizumab, (BI 695502, US-, or EU-approved bevacizumab) | VEGF inhibitor | Two center, randomized, single-blind, single-dose, two-stage, 3 parallel-arm, active-comparator trial in healthy subjects | Establish 3-way clinical PK similarity to enable use of just one reference product for a Phase III biosimilarity trial | 91 |
| Drug–drug interaction | |||||
| NCT01147055, NCT01149785, 26381275 [ | Crizotinib | ALK inhibitor | Two single center, open-label, 2-period, 2-treatment, 1-sequence, single-dose, crossover studies in healthy subjects | Estimate the effects of multiple doses of ketoconazole and rifampin on single-dose PK | 30 (15 each) |
| N/A, 20702754 [ | Nilotinib | BCR/ABL inhibitor | Two single center, open-label, 2-period, 1 sequence, single-dose crossover studies in healthy subjects | Estimate the effects of multiple doses of ketoconazole and rifampin on single-dose PK | 15 (rifampin) 26 (ketoconazole) |
| Organ impairment | |||||
| NCT01298063, 24906422 [ | Afatinib | EGFR inhibitor | Single center, open-label, single-dose study comparing mild (n = 8) and moderate hepatic impairment (n = 8) to matched healthy controls (n = 16) | Compare relative drug exposure between subjects with hepatic impairment and matched healthy controls, as measured by AUC0−∞ and Cmax | 32 |
| NCT02096718, 27436099 [ | Single center, open-label, single-dose study comparing moderate (n = 8) and severe renal impairment (n = 8) to matched healthy controls (n = 14) | Compare relative drug exposure between subjects with renal impairment and matched healthy controls, as measured by AUClast and Cmax | 30 | ||
| Pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic relationships | |||||
| N/A, 28660498 [ | Degarelix | GnRH antagonist | Single center, double-blind (open-label for moxifloxacin) randomized, crossover study in healthy males | Compare the effect of single-dose degarelix, placebo, and moxifloxacin on the QT interval | 80 |
| NCT00406406, 22884766 [ | Bosutinib | Src/Abl inhibitor | Single-center, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, single-ascending dose, sequential-group study in healthy subjects | Assess the safety, tolerability, and PK with ascending doses to support further clinical pharmacology assessment | 48 |
| N/A, 20376000 [ | Sunitinib | PDGFR/VEGFR/KIT/FLT3/CSF1R/RET inhibitor | Single center, open-label, multiple dose study in healthy subjects | To develop a PD/PK model to investigate the concentration-effect relationship between drug and biomarkers (blood pressure, VEGF-A, VEGF-C and sVEGFR-2) | 12 |
ALK, anaplastic lymphoma kinase; AUC, area under the curve; Cmax, maximum concentration; EGFR, endothelial growth factor receptor; GnRH, gonadotropin-releasing hormone; MOA, mechanisms of action; N/A, not available; PD, pharmacodynamics; PDGFR, platelet-derived growth factor receptor; PK, pharmacokinetics; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; VEGFR, VEGF receptor
Selected population pharmacokinetic analyses of anticancer drugs with the inclusion of healthy volunteers
| PMID number | Treatment (MOA) | Total studies included | Purpose of population pharmacokinetic model | Key findings | Number of subjects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 23834452 [ | Axitinib (VEGFR1, 2, and 3 inhibitor) | 10 (all Phase 1) | Estimate population parameters, evaluate effect of food, formulation, demographics, organ function, metabolic genotype | Volume of distribution increased with body weight, but no impact on drug exposure warranting dose modification | 337 (all healthy) |
| 28833380 [ | Selumetinib (MEK inhibitor) | 10 (all Phase 1) | To determine whether the same model is suitable for all formulations and fed conditions and to understand differences in absorption and relative bioavailability with each study | Confirmed previous findings on bioavailability; additional covariates discovered, none requiring dose modification | 346 (all healthy, includes subjects with organ impairment) |
| 26879594 [ | Lenvatinib (VEGFR1, 2, and 3, PDGFRβ, RET inhibitor) | 15 (12-Phase 1, 2-Phase 2, 1-Phase 3) | To characterize the PK profile, and identify factors to explain interindividual PK variability in healthy subjects and patients with cancer | No clinically relevant covariates requiring dose adjustment (including demographics, biomarkers, co-administered agents, organ function) | 779 (196 healthy, 583 patients with cancer) |
| 26898300 [ | Sonidegib (Smo antagonist) | 5 (4-Phase 1, 1-Phase 2) | To develop a structural PK model in healthy subjects and in patients with cancer, characterize covariate effects, and determine sources of variability | High-fat meals increased bioavailability fivefold, healthy volunteers had threefold higher clearance, no dose adjustments needed based on patient characteristics (patients with cancer) | 436 (85 healthy, 351 patients with cancer) |
| 29687244 [ | Cabozantinib (VEGFR2, RET, c-MET inhibitor) | 9 (3-Phase 1, 2-Phase 2, 4-Phase 3) | To analyze the combined PK data from different patient populations and HVs to assess the effect of cancer type, formulation and dose | Small to moderate effect of demographic covariates on apparent clearance (CL/F); Patients with MTC had higher CL/F compared with HVs and other cancer types | 1534 (140 healthy, 1394 patients with cancer) |
HV, healthy volunteers; MOA, mechanisms of action; MTC, medullary thyroid cancer; PDGFR, platelet-derived growth factor receptor; PK, pharmacokinetics; VEGFR, vascular endothelial growth factor receptor