| Literature DB >> 31244816 |
Pierre-Louis Toutain1,2, Pritam Kaur Sidhu2,3, Peter Lees2, Ali Rassouli2,4, Ludovic Pelligand2.
Abstract
The PK/PD cut-off (PK/PDCO) value of florfenicol for calf pathogens was determined for long acting formulations (MSD Nuflor® and a bioequivalent generic product). PK/PDCO is one of the three MICs considered by VetCAST, a sub-committee of the European Committee on Susceptibility Testing (EUCAST), to establish a Clinical Breakpoint for interpreting Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (AST). A population model was built by pooling three pharmacokinetic data sets, obtained from 50 richly sampled calves, receiving one of two formulations (the pioneer product and a generic formulation). A virtual population of 5,000 florfenicol disposition curves was generated by Monte Carlo Simulations (MCS) over the 96 h of the assumed duration of action of the formulations. From this population, the maximum predicted MIC, for which 90% of calves can achieve some a priori selected critical value for two PK/PD indices, AUC/MIC and T>MIC, was established. Numerical values were established for two bacterial species of the bovine respiratory disease (BRD) complex, Pasteurella multocida and Mannheimia haemolytica. It was concluded that the PK/PDCO of florfenicol for both AUC/MIC and T>MIC was 1 mg/L.Entities:
Keywords: Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing; Monte Carlo simulations; PK/PD cut-off; calves; florfenicol; population pharmacokinetics
Year: 2019 PMID: 31244816 PMCID: PMC6581757 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2019.01310
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
The three data sets considered for florfenicol population pharmacokinetic analysis.
| A | Sidhu et al., | 10 | 190 | 0 | 0.25 | 0–80 | Nuflor® |
| B | Company | 16 | 240 | 12 | 0.05 | 0–192 | Nuflor® |
| 16 | 240 | 3 | 0.05 | 0–192 | Generic (Norfenicol®) | ||
| C | Unpublished | 8 | 200 | 7 | 0.05 | 0–216 | Nuflor® |
| Total | 50 | 870 | 22 |
The 10 calves of the Sidhu' paper were healthy female Aberdeen Angus calves weighing 145–204 kg and aged 79–131 days. The 16 European stock calves from Company were 7 males and 9 females, aged ~5–9 months. They were randomly assigned to two treatment groups with 8 animals in each group, in a manner designed to minimize weight differences. All animals were healthy and physiologically normal. Weights ranged from 136 to 205 kg at selection. The eight unpublished calves were Holstein/Fresian cross-breed and weighed from 108 to 165 kg. Data reported as below the Level of Quantification (< BLQ) obtained after the drug administration was low (2.6%) and were ignored in the present analysis.
Figure 1Semi-logarithmic spaghetti plot for 50 calves sorted by sources (left) (Red = A, Gray = B, Blue = C) or by formulation (right) (Black = Nuflor®, Red = generic). Visual inspection of the plots does not suggest major differences either between the three sources of data or for the two formulations, as seen from the intermingling of the curves.
Figure 2Plot of the dependent variable (DV) i.e., plasma florfenicol concentration (μg/ml) vs. population predicted plasma florfenicol concentrations (PRED) (no random component). The plot illustrates observed vs. fitted values of the model function. Ideally, they should fall close to the line of unity y = x. Arithmetic scale (left) and logarithmic scale (right). For both arithmetic and logarithmic scales, data were evenly distributed about the line of identity, indicating no major bias in the population component of the model.
Figure 5Visual Predictive Check (VPC) obtained with 100 replicates of each animal. The observed quantiles (10, 50, and 90%) were well superimposed on the corresponding predictive check quantiles over the observed data. Theoretically, ~20% of the data should be outside the plotted quantiles. The red lines are 10, 50, and 90% quantiles from the actual observed values. The black lines are the 10, 50, and 90% quantiles from the simulated observations (left). Blue and red shaded (right) areas correspond to the 95% confidence interval of the three predicted quantiles.
Population primary (Thetas) and secondary parameters and random effects (Omega) for florfenicol in calves obtained with a 2-compartment model.
| tvKa | 0.975 | 1/h | 0.123 | 12.66 | 0.733 | 1.218 |
| tvA | 5.05 | μg/ml | 0.2368 | 4.69 | 4.59 | 5.52 |
| tvAlpha | 0.0442 | 1/h | 0.0041 | 9.35 | 0.0361 | 0.0523 |
| tvB | 0.781 | μg/ml | 0.243 | 31.13 | 0.304 | 1.258 |
| tvBeta | 0.0104 | 1/h | 0.0019 | 18.31 | 0.0067 | 0.0141 |
| tvC1MultStdev | 0.1397 | 0.014 | 10.37 | 0.111 | 0.168 | |
| tvC1MultStdev | 13.970 | % | ||||
| Covariate analytical method source C | −0.579 | Scalar | 0.195 | −33.73 | −0.963 | −0.196 |
| Covariate analytical method source B | 0.151 | Scalar | 0.163 | 107.85 | −0.169 | 0.472 |
| stdev0 | 0.0152 | μg/ml | 0.0112 | 73.64 | −0.0068 | 0.0371 |
| nKa | 0.279 | 0.076 | 56.69 | 0.051 | ||
| nAlpha | 0.033 | 0.012 | 18.23 | 0.148 | ||
| nB | 0.036 | 0.051 | 19.11 | 0.544 | ||
| nBeta | 0.103 | 0.040 | 32.97 | 0.145 | ||
| nA | 0.080 | 0.024 | 28.92 | 0.050 | ||
| Half-life Alpha | 15.7 | h | 1.46 | 9.35 | 12.8 | 18.5 |
| Half-life Beta (t1/2) | 66.7 | h | 12.21 | 18.31 | 42.7 | 90.6 |
| AUC (0-infinity) | 183.4 | μg*h/ml | 3.41 | 1.86 | 176.1 | 190.1 |
| Absorption first phase | 0.603 | Fraction | 0.058 | 9.64 | 0.489 | 0.717 |
| Absorption second phase | 0.397 | Fraction | 0.058 | 14.66 | 0.283 | 0.511 |
For interpretation of parameters, see Equations (1) (Thetas) and (2) (Omega). AUC was obtained by integrating Equation (1) with estimated tv of thetas parameters. The disposition of florfenicol for the investigated formulations obeys a flip-flop pattern (Discussion) and fraction absorbed during the first vs. the second phase was estimated by computing partial areas associated with the alpha phase (A/Alpha) and the beta phase (B/Beta). Shrinkage was from 0 to 1.
AUC (0–96 h), average concentration (μg/ml), and Time (h) above possible MICs ranging from 0.25 to 2 μg/ml for selected quantiles and corresponding value of the T>MIC in % of 96 h, the claimed duration of action of Nuflor®.
| Time above (h) MIC | 0.25 | 74.29 | 85.54 | 91.89 | 95.88 | 95.92 | 95.94 | 95.95 | 95.96 | 279.1 |
| Time above (h) MIC | 0.5 | 50.96 | 58.37 | 62.46 | 70.44 | 80.19 | 91.1 | 95.86 | 95.89 | 119.88 |
| Time above (h) MIC | 1 | 30.42 | 35.59 | 38.7 | 43.94 | 50.64 | 57.72 | 65.18 | 70.15 | 80.21 |
| Time above (h) MIC | 2 | 11.81 | 16.35 | 18.9 | 22.87 | 28 | 33.45 | 39.29 | 42.63 | 49.62 |
| Time above MIC (% of 96 h) | 0.25 | 77.38 | 89.1 | 95.72 | 99.87 | 99.92 | 99.94 | 99.95 | 99.96 | 290.73 |
| Time above MIC (% of 96 h) | 0.5 | 53.08 | 60.8 | 65.06 | 73.37 | 83.53 | 94.9 | 99.85 | 99.89 | 124.87 |
| Time above MIC (% of 96 h) | 1 | 31.69 | 37.07 | 45.77 | 52.75 | 60.12 | 67.89 | 73.07 | 83.55 | |
| Time above MIC (% of 96 h) | 2 | 12.3 | 17.03 | 19.68 | 23.82 | 29.17 | 34.85 | 40.93 | 44.41 | 51.69 |
| AUC (0–96 h) | μg*h/ml | 88.5 | 103.4 | 113.1 | 130.5 | 153.6 | 181 | 211.1 | 232.5 | 291 |
| Average concentration (μg/ml) over 96 h | μg/ml | 0.92 | 1.08 | 1.36 | 1.6 | 1.89 | 2.2 | 2.42 | 3.03 | |
Time above MICs (from 0.25 to 2 μg/ml) was computed from the 5,000 curves generated by MCS using the population model. Bold values indicates values for the selected PK/PD cut-off.