Cargando…

Evaluation of the Pharmacokinetic Interaction of Ubrogepant Coadministered With Sumatriptan and of the Safety of Ubrogepant With Triptans

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the potential for pharmacokinetic interaction and the safety and tolerability when ubrogepant and sumatriptan are coadministered in a Phase 1 study in healthy participants, and to inform the safety and tolerability of ubrogepant alone and in combination with triptans in Phase...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Jakate, Abhijeet, Boinpally, Ramesh, Butler, Matthew, Lu, Kaifeng, McGeeney, Danielle, Periclou, Antonia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7496299/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32573795
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/head.13862
_version_ 1783583066648739840
author Jakate, Abhijeet
Boinpally, Ramesh
Butler, Matthew
Lu, Kaifeng
McGeeney, Danielle
Periclou, Antonia
author_facet Jakate, Abhijeet
Boinpally, Ramesh
Butler, Matthew
Lu, Kaifeng
McGeeney, Danielle
Periclou, Antonia
author_sort Jakate, Abhijeet
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the potential for pharmacokinetic interaction and the safety and tolerability when ubrogepant and sumatriptan are coadministered in a Phase 1 study in healthy participants, and to inform the safety and tolerability of ubrogepant alone and in combination with triptans in Phase 3 trials in participants with migraine. BACKGROUND: Calcitonin gene–related peptide is a potent vasodilatory neurotransmitter believed to play a key role in the pathophysiology of migraine. Ubrogepant (UBRELVY™) is a potent and selective antagonist of the human calcitonin gene–related peptide receptor approved for the acute treatment of migraine. Sumatriptan is a serotonin receptor agonist and the most commonly used triptan for the acute treatment of migraine. Ubrogepant could be prescribed with triptans. DESIGN: The Phase 1 study was a single‐center, open‐label, randomized, 3‐way crossover, single‐dose, pharmacokinetic interaction study, where participants received each of 3 oral treatments with a 7‐day washout period between treatments: single dose of ubrogepant 100 mg, single dose of sumatriptan 100 mg, and ubrogepant 100 mg plus sumatriptan 100 mg. Pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated using a model‐independent approach. The ACHIEVE I and II trials were 2 multicenter, single‐attack, randomized, Phase 3 trials in adults with a history of migraine with or without aura. Participants had the option to take a second dose of study medication or rescue medication to treat a nonresponding migraine or a migraine recurrence from 2 to 48 hours after the initial dose of study medication. Rescue medication options included acetaminophen, nonsteroidal anti‐inflammatory drugs, opioids, anti‐emetics, or triptans. Treatment‐emergent adverse events were evaluated up to 30 days after the last dose in the Phase 1 and Phase 3 studies. RESULTS: Ubrogepant median time to maximum plasma concentration was delayed (3 hours [range: 1‐5 hours] vs 1.5 hours [range: 1‐4 hours]), mean maximum plasma concentration was reduced by 24% (coefficient of variation: 37.4%) when ubrogepant was coadministered with sumatriptan (n = 29) compared with ubrogepant administered alone (N = 30). No significant effect was observed on the area under the plasma concentration‐time curve of ubrogepant. Sumatriptan area under the curve and maximum plasma concentration showed no significant change when sumatriptan was coadministered with ubrogepant (n = 29), but the sumatriptan time to maximum plasma concentration was delayed (1 hour [range: 0.5‐5 hours] vs 3 hours [range: 0.5‐6 hours]. No treatment‐emergent adverse events were reported with the coadministration of ubrogepant 100 mg and sumatriptan 100 mg in the Phase 1 study. The pooled safety data from ACHIEVE trials (N = 1938) showed similar rates of treatment‐related treatment‐emergent adverse events between participants who took ubrogepant alone and participants who took ubrogepant and a triptan as a rescue medication (14.9% [53/355] vs 12.8% [5/39] in the ubrogepant 100 mg treatment group, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Although there were slight alterations in ubrogepant pharmacokinetic parameters when coadministered with sumatriptan, such changes are expected to have minimal clinical relevance, especially because no changes were seen in sumatriptan area under the curve and maximum plasma concentration when coadministered with ubrogepant. Coadministration of ubrogepant with sumatriptan was well tolerated in healthy participants in the Phase 1 study, and coadministration of ubrogepant with triptans was well tolerated in participants with migraine in the Phase 3 trials. No new safety concerns for ubrogepant were identified across all trials.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7496299
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher John Wiley and Sons Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-74962992020-09-25 Evaluation of the Pharmacokinetic Interaction of Ubrogepant Coadministered With Sumatriptan and of the Safety of Ubrogepant With Triptans Jakate, Abhijeet Boinpally, Ramesh Butler, Matthew Lu, Kaifeng McGeeney, Danielle Periclou, Antonia Headache Research Submissions OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the potential for pharmacokinetic interaction and the safety and tolerability when ubrogepant and sumatriptan are coadministered in a Phase 1 study in healthy participants, and to inform the safety and tolerability of ubrogepant alone and in combination with triptans in Phase 3 trials in participants with migraine. BACKGROUND: Calcitonin gene–related peptide is a potent vasodilatory neurotransmitter believed to play a key role in the pathophysiology of migraine. Ubrogepant (UBRELVY™) is a potent and selective antagonist of the human calcitonin gene–related peptide receptor approved for the acute treatment of migraine. Sumatriptan is a serotonin receptor agonist and the most commonly used triptan for the acute treatment of migraine. Ubrogepant could be prescribed with triptans. DESIGN: The Phase 1 study was a single‐center, open‐label, randomized, 3‐way crossover, single‐dose, pharmacokinetic interaction study, where participants received each of 3 oral treatments with a 7‐day washout period between treatments: single dose of ubrogepant 100 mg, single dose of sumatriptan 100 mg, and ubrogepant 100 mg plus sumatriptan 100 mg. Pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated using a model‐independent approach. The ACHIEVE I and II trials were 2 multicenter, single‐attack, randomized, Phase 3 trials in adults with a history of migraine with or without aura. Participants had the option to take a second dose of study medication or rescue medication to treat a nonresponding migraine or a migraine recurrence from 2 to 48 hours after the initial dose of study medication. Rescue medication options included acetaminophen, nonsteroidal anti‐inflammatory drugs, opioids, anti‐emetics, or triptans. Treatment‐emergent adverse events were evaluated up to 30 days after the last dose in the Phase 1 and Phase 3 studies. RESULTS: Ubrogepant median time to maximum plasma concentration was delayed (3 hours [range: 1‐5 hours] vs 1.5 hours [range: 1‐4 hours]), mean maximum plasma concentration was reduced by 24% (coefficient of variation: 37.4%) when ubrogepant was coadministered with sumatriptan (n = 29) compared with ubrogepant administered alone (N = 30). No significant effect was observed on the area under the plasma concentration‐time curve of ubrogepant. Sumatriptan area under the curve and maximum plasma concentration showed no significant change when sumatriptan was coadministered with ubrogepant (n = 29), but the sumatriptan time to maximum plasma concentration was delayed (1 hour [range: 0.5‐5 hours] vs 3 hours [range: 0.5‐6 hours]. No treatment‐emergent adverse events were reported with the coadministration of ubrogepant 100 mg and sumatriptan 100 mg in the Phase 1 study. The pooled safety data from ACHIEVE trials (N = 1938) showed similar rates of treatment‐related treatment‐emergent adverse events between participants who took ubrogepant alone and participants who took ubrogepant and a triptan as a rescue medication (14.9% [53/355] vs 12.8% [5/39] in the ubrogepant 100 mg treatment group, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Although there were slight alterations in ubrogepant pharmacokinetic parameters when coadministered with sumatriptan, such changes are expected to have minimal clinical relevance, especially because no changes were seen in sumatriptan area under the curve and maximum plasma concentration when coadministered with ubrogepant. Coadministration of ubrogepant with sumatriptan was well tolerated in healthy participants in the Phase 1 study, and coadministration of ubrogepant with triptans was well tolerated in participants with migraine in the Phase 3 trials. No new safety concerns for ubrogepant were identified across all trials. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-06-23 2020 /pmc/articles/PMC7496299/ /pubmed/32573795 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/head.13862 Text en © 2020 The Authors. Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain published by Wiley Periodicals, LLC. on behalf of American Headache Society This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Research Submissions
Jakate, Abhijeet
Boinpally, Ramesh
Butler, Matthew
Lu, Kaifeng
McGeeney, Danielle
Periclou, Antonia
Evaluation of the Pharmacokinetic Interaction of Ubrogepant Coadministered With Sumatriptan and of the Safety of Ubrogepant With Triptans
title Evaluation of the Pharmacokinetic Interaction of Ubrogepant Coadministered With Sumatriptan and of the Safety of Ubrogepant With Triptans
title_full Evaluation of the Pharmacokinetic Interaction of Ubrogepant Coadministered With Sumatriptan and of the Safety of Ubrogepant With Triptans
title_fullStr Evaluation of the Pharmacokinetic Interaction of Ubrogepant Coadministered With Sumatriptan and of the Safety of Ubrogepant With Triptans
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of the Pharmacokinetic Interaction of Ubrogepant Coadministered With Sumatriptan and of the Safety of Ubrogepant With Triptans
title_short Evaluation of the Pharmacokinetic Interaction of Ubrogepant Coadministered With Sumatriptan and of the Safety of Ubrogepant With Triptans
title_sort evaluation of the pharmacokinetic interaction of ubrogepant coadministered with sumatriptan and of the safety of ubrogepant with triptans
topic Research Submissions
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7496299/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32573795
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/head.13862
work_keys_str_mv AT jakateabhijeet evaluationofthepharmacokineticinteractionofubrogepantcoadministeredwithsumatriptanandofthesafetyofubrogepantwithtriptans
AT boinpallyramesh evaluationofthepharmacokineticinteractionofubrogepantcoadministeredwithsumatriptanandofthesafetyofubrogepantwithtriptans
AT butlermatthew evaluationofthepharmacokineticinteractionofubrogepantcoadministeredwithsumatriptanandofthesafetyofubrogepantwithtriptans
AT lukaifeng evaluationofthepharmacokineticinteractionofubrogepantcoadministeredwithsumatriptanandofthesafetyofubrogepantwithtriptans
AT mcgeeneydanielle evaluationofthepharmacokineticinteractionofubrogepantcoadministeredwithsumatriptanandofthesafetyofubrogepantwithtriptans
AT periclouantonia evaluationofthepharmacokineticinteractionofubrogepantcoadministeredwithsumatriptanandofthesafetyofubrogepantwithtriptans