| Literature DB >> 36036856 |
Francesco Franchi1, David J Schneider2, Jayne Prats3, Weihong Fan4, Fabiana Rollini1, Latonya Been1, Heidi S Taatjes-Sommer2, Deepak L Bhatt5, Efthymios N Deliargyris6, Dominick J Angiolillo7.
Abstract
Low dose enteric-coated aspirin (EC-ASA) is routinely used for secondary cardiovascular event prevention. However, absorption of EC tablets is poor, which can result in subtherapeutic antiplatelet effects. Phospholipid-aspirin liquid filled capsules (PL-ASA) are a novel FDA-approved immediate-release formulation designed to reduce gastrointestinal (GI) injury by limiting direct contact with the stomach lining. We compared the pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacodynamic (PD) profiles of PL-ASA versus EC-ASA at a low dose. This randomized, open-label, crossover study assessed PK and PD following a single 81-mg dose of PL-ASA versus EC-ASA under fasting conditions in 36 volunteers without cardiovascular disease between 18 and 75 years of age. Volunteers were randomly assigned 1:1 to either PL-ASA then EC-ASA or vice versa with a minimum 14-day washout. Assessments included PK parameters for acetylsalicylic acid and salicylic acid, platelet aggregation in response to arachidonic acid (AA), and serum thromboxane B2 (TxB2) assessments over 24 h. PL-ASA was rapidly absorbed. PL-ASA reached Tmax 3 h earlier (1.01 vs. 4.00 h, p < 0.0001), with almost double the Cmax (720 vs. 368 ng/mL, p < 0.0001) and overall 44% higher exposure of acetylsalicylic acid (AUC0-t: 601 vs. 416 h*ng/mL, p = 0.0013) compared with EC-ASA. Within 1 h of dosing, PL-ASA achieved significantly lower residual platelet aggregation, which persisted for the full 24 h (median AA-LTA was 47% with PL-ASA vs. 80.5% with EC-ASA; p = 0.0022 at hour-24). Treatment with PL-ASA also resulted in significantly lower serum TxB2 concentrations at each time point compared with EC-ASA (all p-values < 0.05). PL-ASA resulted in faster and more complete aspirin absorption paralleled by more prompt and potent platelet inhibition compared with EC-ASA after a single 81 mg dose. PL-ASA represents an attractive novel aspirin formulation for the secondary prevention of cardiovascular events.Clinical Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT04811625.Entities:
Keywords: Aspirin; PL-ASA; Pharmacodynamic; Pharmacokinetic; Platelet
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36036856 PMCID: PMC9421621 DOI: 10.1007/s11239-022-02687-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Thromb Thrombolysis ISSN: 0929-5305 Impact factor: 5.221
Fig. 1Impact of the pharmaceutical formulation on aspirin’s (81 mg) disposition Plasma concentration time profiles of acetylsalicylic acid (A) and salicylic acid (B) were compared in fasted volunteers (n = 36) who received single doses of 81 mg PL-ASA and 81 mg EC-ASA.
Statistical analysis of log-normalized ratio of PL-ASA to EC-ASA for acetylsalicylic acid PK parameters. – PK population (N = 36)
| Parameter | PL-ASA | EC-ASA | Ratio (%) | 95% CI | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AUC0-t (h*ng/mL)a | 601 (41.1) | 416 (53.7) | 144 | 117–178 | 0.0013 |
| Cmax (ng/mL)a | 720 (33.7) | 368 (80.3) | 196 | 148–259 | < 0.0001 |
| Tmax (h)b | 1.01 (0.47, 3.03) | 4.00 (1.50, 6.63) | < 0.0001 |
The AUC0-t and Cmax analyses were performed on log-transformed parameters using a linear mixed-effects ANOVA model with treatment, period, and sequence as fixed effects and subject as a random effect
AUC area under curve from time zero to last measurable concentration, C maximum concentration, CI confidence interval, h hour, PK pharmacokinetic
aGeometric least square mean (coefficient of variation, %)
bMedian (range)
Fig. 2Arachidonic acid-induced platelet aggregation assessed by LTA over time for PL-ASA and EC-ASA. Values are medians. p-values were calculated by using mixed-effects, repeated-measure ANOVA model with sequence, period, and treatment as fixed effects and subject as a random effect
Summary of serum TxB2 concentration (ng/mL) at each time point—PD TxB2 population (N = 21)
| Time point median (min, max) | PL-ASA (N = 20) | EC-ASA (N = 18) | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | 96.53 (73.4, 117.3) | 100.5 (71.2, 117.2) | 0.2357 |
| 0.5 h post | 96.10 (46.0, 117.4) | 101.8 (75.6, 117.3) | 0.0287 |
| 1 h post | 87.84 (26.5, 114.5) | 98.27 (68.2, 119.4) | 0.0005 |
| 2 h post | 77.62 (17.8, 97.6) | 98.89 (61.8, 114.3) | < 0.0001 |
| 3 h post | 72.06 (0.8, 93.1) | 96.55 (56.7, 116.3) | 0.0004 |
| 4 h post | 66.16 (11.5, 98.6) | 95.17 (40.9, 112.9) | 0.0001 |
| 6 h post | 72.92 (17.7, 94.8) | 85.25 (11.8, 108.5) | 0.0039 |
| 8 h post | 72.80 (17.8, 99.3) | 85.17 (6.3, 110.3) | 0.0412 |
| 10 h post | 65.59 (14.1, 99.7) | 89.40 (54.2, 111.0) | 0.0007 |
| 24 h post | 73.66 (37.9, 97.3) | 81.49 (39.3, 109.0) | 0.0203 |
p-values were calculated based on a linear nixed-effects ANOVA model with sequence, period and treatment as fixed effects and subject as random effect
EC enteric-coated, PD pharmacodynamic, SD standard deviation, TxB thromboxane B2
Fig. 3Response to Aspirin: Inhibition of TxB2 Production (N = 21) p-values were calculated by using McNemar's Exact test for binary matched-pairs data. The TxB2 analysis was based on 21 subjects who had valid TxB2 concentration data
Fig. 4Time to Inhibition of TxB2 Production, hours (N = 21). Values are significantly different at all timepoints. p-values were calculated by using mixed-effects, repeated-measure ANOVA model with sequence, period, and treatment as fixed effects and subject as a random effect. The time to cut-off was set as 24 h if the cutoff point was not achieved at 24 h post dose. The TxB2 analysis was based on 21 subjects who had valid TxB2 concentration data