| Literature DB >> 31174438 |
Abstract
Intravaginal rings (IVRs) are an option for continuous administration of drugs in women. As an attractive approach for the treatment of endometriosis-associated pelvic pain, IVRs delivering a combination of the aromatase inhibitor anastrozole (ATZ) and the progestin levonorgestrel (LNG) have been developed. This article describes the developmental pharmacokinetic (PK) aspects covering the characterization of in vitro release, preclinical IVR PK investigations in monkeys, and clinical PK considerations. An IVR for ATZ has been developed and investigated in healthy menstruating female cynomolgus monkeys showing effective in vivo release. PK data from the size-adapted IVR used in these animals can be translated into a human context as confirmed in human studies where predefined exposure levels of ATZ were reached. As ATZ may cause harm to the fetus, use of effective contraception has to be assured in women of childbearing potential. Therefore, the IVR delivers a low dose of LNG as a contraceptive. Although the daily dose differed strongly between both drugs (20 µg LNG/d to >1 mg ATZ/d), simultaneous delivery of ATZ and LNG in vitro and in vivo was observed with a high correlation between the in vitro release and PK profiles. The PK characteristics successfully guided the design of clinical studies investigating the drug-drug interaction (DDI) potential. No relevant DDI between both the investigated or other vaginally administered drugs were identified.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical pharmacokinetics; drug delivery; gynecology; women's health
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31174438 PMCID: PMC6567139 DOI: 10.1080/10717544.2019.1622609
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Deliv ISSN: 1071-7544 Impact factor: 6.419
Figure 1.Intervaginal rings (IVR): (A) Monkey IVRs releasing ATZ; (B) Human IVRs releasing ATZ and LNG (54 mm diameter).
Overview of clinical studies including PK investigations.
| Study | Objective | Nominal daily doses | Duration | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FiH 2011-005620-18 | PK, PD, safety, and tolerability | ATZ/LNG 500/20 µg/d | 21 | 56 days | Schultze-Mosgau et al., |
| DDI (vaginal) 2014-005167-32 | PK effects on ATZ/LNG of intravaginal: | ATZ/LNG 1050/40 µg/d | 16 days | Nave et al., | |
| DDI (phase 2b) | PK effects of ATZ on the PK of LNG | ATZ/LNG 300/40 µg/d | 40 | 84 days | Nave et al., |
| mono-LNG IVR | PK of a revised LNG formulation | LNG 40 µg/d | 13 | 28 days | Nave et al., |
2 IVRs ATZ/LNG 750/20 µg/d.
Same subjects (change over).
EudraCT number.
EudraCT number not applicable as study was performed in Japan.
Figure 2.Mean (SD) ATZ plasma concentration time profiles after IVR insertion in female cynomolgus monkeys and young women.
Mean average (Cav) ATZ plasma concentrations following insertion of first IVR.
| Monkey | Human | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nominal dose ATZ µg/d | 10 | 50 | 250 | 500 | 1000 | 1500 |
| 0.29 (42) | 1.4 (40) | 5.9 (15) | 14.1 (28) | 24.5 (21) | 43.0 (31) | |
| 0.029 | 0.035 | 0.024 | 0.028 | 0.025 | 0.029 | |
Note: Animal data are in mean (%CV) while human data are provided as geometric mean (%CV).
ATZ/LNG 500/20 µg/d.
ATZ/LNG 1000/30 µg/d.
2 IVRs ATZ/LNG 750/20 µg/d.
Geometric mean (CV%) C trough values of ATZ and LNG in plasma for each study and dose group.
| Study | Nominal daily doses | Specified wearing period | ATZ (µg/L) | LNG (µg/L) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FiH (Schultze-Mosgau et al., | ATZ/LNG 500/20 µg/d | 2 | 12.5 (53.6) | 0.184 (69.1) |
| DDI (vaginal) (Nave et al., | ATZ/LNG 1050/40 µg/d | 1 | 24.9 (57.3) | 0.338 (46.0) |
| DDI (Nave et al., | ATZ/LNG 300/40 µg/d | 1–3 | 7.85 (36.0) | 0.331 (48.8) |
| mono-LNG IVR (Nave et al., | LNG 40 µg/d | 2 | – | 0.314 (38.2) |
2 IVRs ATZ/LNG 750 µg/20 µg.
At the end of the wearing period.
Figure 3.Mean (SD) concentration of LNG in plasma following insertion of an IVR (ATZ/LNG 1050/40 µg/d) on day 9 and after 4 weeks [top] and following repeated oral LNG doses (30 µg/d) for 4 weeks [bottom]. Dotted line: average concentration (C av) p.o. in steady state.