| Literature DB >> 32466789 |
Christian Siebel1, Gudrun Würthwein1, Claudia Lanvers-Kaminsky1, Nicolas André2, Frank Berthold3, Ilaria Castelli4, Pascal Chastagner5, François Doz6, Martin English7, Gabriele Escherich8, Michael C Frühwald9, Norbert Graf10, Andreas H Groll1, Antonio Ruggiero11, Georg Hempel12, Joachim Boos13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite its cardiotoxicity doxorubicin is widely used for the treatment of paediatric malignancies. Current treatment regimens appear to be suboptimal as treatment strategies vary and do not follow a clear pharmacological rationale. Standardisation of dosing strategies in particular for infants and younger children is required but is hampered by scarcely defined exposure-response relationships. The aim is to provide a rational dosing concept allowing for a reduction of variability in systemic therapy intensity and subsequently unforeseen side effects.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiotoxicity; Children; Delphi procedure; Doxorubicin; Pharmacokinetics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32466789 PMCID: PMC7254632 DOI: 10.1186/s40360-020-00417-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pharmacol Toxicol ISSN: 2050-6511 Impact factor: 2.483
Fig. 1DOX AUC (a) and cmax (b) across the age range from 0 to 18 years. Typical AUC and cmax values were simulated for children on the 50th percentile of body height and weight for three selected treatment regimens. Underlying DOX doses were adjusted as specified by the respective regimen. NB Registry 2016 N4 (standard dose: 15 mg·m− 2, 0.5 h): reduction to 100% of the body weight-based dose in children < 12 months or < 10 kg; CWS-SoTiSaR (20 mg·m− 2, 3 h): reduction to 67% of the body weight-based dose in children < 6 months and reduction to 100% of the body weight-based dose in children ≥6 months but ≤10 kg; AIEOP-BFM ALL 2017 (30 mg·m− 2, 1 h): reduction to 67% of the BSA-based dose in children < 6 months and reduction to 75% of the BSA-based dose in children 6–12 months. The grey boxes mark the areas of the curve where doses were reduced. For a child on the 50th percentile of body height and weight the threshold for dose reduction is reached at an age of 14 months exceeding a body weight of 10 kg (NB Registry 2016 N4, CWS-SoTiSaR) or 12 months (AIEOP-BFM ALL 2017), respectively
Fig. 2DOX AUC and cmax depending on age (a, b), body composition (c, d), and treatment regimen (e, f). For (a, b) children on the 50th percentile of body height and weight were simulated and for (c, d) children aged 1 year were simulated. The DOX dose was adopted from the CWS-guidance and doses were reduced in children < 6 months to 67% of the body weight-based dose and in children 6–12 months or < 10 kg to 100% of the body weight-based dose (see Additional file 1). For (e, f) a median 2-year-old child was simulated (for doses and infusion times see Additional file 1). To display the remaining inter-individual variability that cannot be attributed to the influence of age or body surface area simulations were replicated 1000 times
Fig. 3Comparison of observed AUC from 94 patients from the EPOC-MS-001-Doxo trial and dose-adjusted AUC. Adjusted DOX doses were derived from a model-based dose calculation rule. AUC values were calculated based on the post-hoc clearance estimates taken from the NONMEM analysis and normalised to the target AUC of a typical 18-year-old boy. The dashed red line indicates the target AUC of 100% and dotted red lines indicate a range of 80–125%
Key aspects that need to be considered for clinical implementation of model-based dosing recommendations
| Development and implementation of miniaturised bedside analytics in order to minimise pre-analytical variability and facilitate drug monitoring | |
| External validation of pharmacokinetic models and, if appropriate, further refinement in order to assess the predictive power and decrease the uncertainties of model predictions | |
| Development of optimised limited sampling strategies to keep the burden of blood sampling for children at a minimum | |
| Clinical validation of model-based dosing recommendations in a prospectively designed clinical trial |