| Literature DB >> 32535847 |
Anna H-X P Chan Kwong1,2,3,4, Elisa A M Calvier5, David Fabre5, Florence Gattacceca6, Sonia Khier7,8.
Abstract
Population pharmacokinetic analysis is used to estimate pharmacokinetic parameters and their variability from concentration data. Due to data sparseness issues, available datasets often do not allow the estimation of all parameters of the suitable model. The PRIOR subroutine in NONMEM supports the estimation of some or all parameters with values from previous models, as an alternative to fixing them or adding data to the dataset. From a literature review, the best practices were compiled to provide a practical guidance for the use of the PRIOR subroutine in NONMEM. Thirty-three articles reported the use of the PRIOR subroutine in NONMEM, mostly in special populations. This approach allowed fast, stable and satisfying modelling. The guidance provides general advice on how to select the most appropriate reference model when there are several previous models available, and to implement and weight the selected parameter values in the PRIOR function. On the model built with PRIOR, the similarity of estimates with the ones of the reference model and the sensitivity of the model to the PRIOR values should be checked. Covariates could be implemented a priori (from the reference model) or a posteriori, only on parameters estimated without prior (search for new covariates).Entities:
Keywords: Guidance; Model; NONMEM; PRIOR; Pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic; Population pharmacokinetics
Year: 2020 PMID: 32535847 PMCID: PMC7520416 DOI: 10.1007/s10928-020-09695-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pharmacokinet Pharmacodyn ISSN: 1567-567X Impact factor: 2.745
Fig. 1Plot of individual η clearances (black line) on top of theoretical η-distribution N(0, ω2) (dotted line). The model resulting in the top plot is to be preferred over the one resulting in the bottom plot. ETACL: η clearances. Adapted from [43]
Fig. 2Illustration of parameters of the random-effects-model, from [38]. k = μ + ϵk + ζk (1),: typical value in the study k, μ: typical value in the « universe» of population, ϵk: deviation from the typical value because of sampling errors in the study k, ζk: deviation from the typical value because of over-arching distribution of true effect sizes with the mean, μ, ζk ~ N(μ, τ2)
Fig. 3Example of codes of a NONMEM control file for implementation of PRIOR, NWPRI subroutine, informative and non-informative priors; as defined by Bauer [1] and Gisleskog et al. [3]
Fig. 4Case example of the plot proposed by Tsamandouras et al. [11], data from [43]. The estimate of THETA(CL) in the model built with prior was 12.7 L.h−1 (black line). THETA(CL) in the reference model was 9.89 L.h−1 and its standard deviation 3.71 L.h−1 (dotted lines)