| Literature DB >> 36010126 |
Sissel Sundell Haslund-Krog1,2, Inger Merete Jørgensen2,3, Kim Dalhoff1,2, Helle Holst1.
Abstract
Developing acceptable medicines for children is a complicated task. Several factors must be considered, including age, physiology, texture preference, formulation, and legal framework among others. In the development of new paediatric medicines, these factors are assessed. However, for older medicines, e.g., prednisolone, acceptability is still a challenge. This study was an open-label randomised three-arm cross-over study investigating different formulations of prednisolone (crushed tablets, whole tablets, and oral solution) in paediatric patients with asthma and asthma-like symptoms. Participants were randomised into two different formulations on two consecutive days. For each formulation, the child or caregiver was asked to evaluate acceptability using a modified five-point Wong Baker Face scale. An analysis of variance (ANOVA) model was used to test for significance. For the 41 children, included mean age was 4.7 years (SD ± 3.6), and mean weight was 21 kg (SD ± 10.8). Sixty-one percent were boys. The participants were divided accordingly into three age groups: 6 to 23 months (N = 11), 2 to 5 years (N = 14), and 6-11 years (N = 16). The overall acceptability was low, with only 23 out of 71 scores rating the treatment either 1 or 2 (32%). The ANOVA test showed a significant difference in acceptability score between crushed tablets and whole tablets (p < 0.003). The mean acceptability score for the crushed tablet was the least favourable at 3.9 compared to oral solution (3.1), oro-dispersible tablet (2.8), and whole tablets (2.4). This is problematic in long-term treatment and for the youngest children who cannot swallow tablets. The improvement of age-appropriate and acceptable formulations is necessary.Entities:
Keywords: acceptability; drug formulations; paediatric medicine
Year: 2022 PMID: 36010126 PMCID: PMC9406412 DOI: 10.3390/children9081236
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Children (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9067
Figure 1Study design. In the initial design, all participants could be randomised into the oro-dispersible tablet group. When we no longer could procure these tablets, the second design was as pictured in Figure 1. A standard design would have had 4 days for each participant testing all 4 formulations of prednisolone in the initial design and, correspondingly, 3 formulations in the second design.
Figure 2Wong Baker Face scale, as reported in [14].
Dosing examples.
| Weight | Crushed or Whole Tablet | Oro-Dispersible Tablets | Oral Solution | Oral Solution |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9 kg | 5 + 5 mg | 5 + 5 mg | 1.8 mL | |
| 10 kg | 5 + 5 mg | 5 + 5 mg | 2.0 mL | |
| 11 kg | 5 + 5 mg | 5 + 5 mg | 0.6 mL | |
| 15 kg | 5 + 5 + 5 mg | 5 + 5 + 5 mg | 0.8 mL | |
| 20 kg | 12.5 + 5 + 2.5 mg | 20 mg | 1 mL |
Demographic data.
| Number of Patients | N (%) | Mean ± SD | Median (Range) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age in years | N = 41 | 4.7 ± 3.6 | 4.0 (0–11) | |
| Age groups | N = 41 | 6–23 months: 12 (28.6) | ||
| Gender | N = 41 | Male: 25 (61) | ||
| Race | N = 41 | Caucasian: 31 (77.5) | ||
| Height in m | N = 34 | 1.16 ± 0.23 | 1.16 (0.78–1.56) | |
| Weight in kg at inclusion | N = 41 | 21.1 ± 10.8 | 17.6 (8.2–44.5) |
Figure 3Boxplot with the median acceptability scores for four prednisolone formulations. Minimum, maximum and interquartile range are also shown. Formulations: 1 = Crushed tablets; 2 = Oral solution; 3 = Oro-dispersible tablet; 4 = Whole tablet (reference group).
Figure 4The four prednisolone formulations (1–4) in relation to acceptability scores in percentage. Acceptability scores in each category of the Wong Baker Face scale from ‘Good’ to ‘Really Bad’.