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Pharmacologic effects of oseltamivir in immunocompromised adult patients as assessed by population PK/PD analysis and drug‐disease modelling for dosing regimen optimization

AIM: Pharmacologic effects were analysed to determine a dose recommendation for oseltamivir in immunocompromised (IC) adults with influenza. METHODS: Quantitative clinical pharmacology methods were applied to data from 160 adult IC patients (aged 18‐78 years) from two studies (NV20234, 150 patients;...

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Autores principales: Sturm, Stefan, Lemenuel‐Diot, Annabelle, Patel, Kashyap, Gibiansky, Leonid, Bhardwaj, Rajinder, Smith, Patrick F., Dang, Steve, Zwanziger, Elke, Nasmyth‐Miller, Clare, Ravva, Patanjali
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/PMC8246794/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32808306
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bcp.14523
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author Sturm, Stefan
Lemenuel‐Diot, Annabelle
Patel, Kashyap
Gibiansky, Leonid
Bhardwaj, Rajinder
Smith, Patrick F.
Dang, Steve
Zwanziger, Elke
Nasmyth‐Miller, Clare
Ravva, Patanjali
author_facet Sturm, Stefan
Lemenuel‐Diot, Annabelle
Patel, Kashyap
Gibiansky, Leonid
Bhardwaj, Rajinder
Smith, Patrick F.
Dang, Steve
Zwanziger, Elke
Nasmyth‐Miller, Clare
Ravva, Patanjali
author_sort Sturm, Stefan
collection PubMed
description AIM: Pharmacologic effects were analysed to determine a dose recommendation for oseltamivir in immunocompromised (IC) adults with influenza. METHODS: Quantitative clinical pharmacology methods were applied to data from 160 adult IC patients (aged 18‐78 years) from two studies (NV20234, 150 patients; NV25118, 10 patients) who received oseltamivir 75‐200 mg twice daily for up to 10 days. An established population‐pharmacokinetic (PK) model with additional effects on oseltamivir and oseltamivir carboxylate (OC) clearance described the PK characteristics of oseltamivir in IC patients versus otherwise healthy (OwH) patients from previous clinical trials. Estimated PK parameters were used to evaluate exposure‐response relationships for virologic endpoints (time to cessation of viral shedding, viral load measures and treatment‐emergent resistance). A drug‐disease model characterized the viral kinetics of influenza accounting for the effect of OC on viral production. RESULTS: Oseltamivir clearance was 32.5% lower (95% confidence interval [CI], 26.1‐38.8) and OC clearance was 33.7% lower (95% CI, 23.2‐44.1) in IC versus OwH patients. No notable exposure‐response relationships were identified for exposures higher than those achieved after conventional dose oseltamivir 75 mg, which appeared to be close to the maximum effect of oseltamivir. Simulations of the drug‐disease model predicted that initiating treatment within 48 hours of symptom onset had maximum impact, and a treatment duration of 10 days was favourable over 3‐5 days to limit viral rebound. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings support the use of conventional‐dose oseltamivir 75 mg twice daily for 10 days in the treatment of IC adult patients with influenza.
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spelling pubmed-82467942021-07-02 Pharmacologic effects of oseltamivir in immunocompromised adult patients as assessed by population PK/PD analysis and drug‐disease modelling for dosing regimen optimization Sturm, Stefan Lemenuel‐Diot, Annabelle Patel, Kashyap Gibiansky, Leonid Bhardwaj, Rajinder Smith, Patrick F. Dang, Steve Zwanziger, Elke Nasmyth‐Miller, Clare Ravva, Patanjali Br J Clin Pharmacol Original Articles AIM: Pharmacologic effects were analysed to determine a dose recommendation for oseltamivir in immunocompromised (IC) adults with influenza. METHODS: Quantitative clinical pharmacology methods were applied to data from 160 adult IC patients (aged 18‐78 years) from two studies (NV20234, 150 patients; NV25118, 10 patients) who received oseltamivir 75‐200 mg twice daily for up to 10 days. An established population‐pharmacokinetic (PK) model with additional effects on oseltamivir and oseltamivir carboxylate (OC) clearance described the PK characteristics of oseltamivir in IC patients versus otherwise healthy (OwH) patients from previous clinical trials. Estimated PK parameters were used to evaluate exposure‐response relationships for virologic endpoints (time to cessation of viral shedding, viral load measures and treatment‐emergent resistance). A drug‐disease model characterized the viral kinetics of influenza accounting for the effect of OC on viral production. RESULTS: Oseltamivir clearance was 32.5% lower (95% confidence interval [CI], 26.1‐38.8) and OC clearance was 33.7% lower (95% CI, 23.2‐44.1) in IC versus OwH patients. No notable exposure‐response relationships were identified for exposures higher than those achieved after conventional dose oseltamivir 75 mg, which appeared to be close to the maximum effect of oseltamivir. Simulations of the drug‐disease model predicted that initiating treatment within 48 hours of symptom onset had maximum impact, and a treatment duration of 10 days was favourable over 3‐5 days to limit viral rebound. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings support the use of conventional‐dose oseltamivir 75 mg twice daily for 10 days in the treatment of IC adult patients with influenza. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-09-09 2021-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8246794/ /pubmed/32808306 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bcp.14523 Text en © 2020 The Authors. British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Pharmacological Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Sturm, Stefan
Lemenuel‐Diot, Annabelle
Patel, Kashyap
Gibiansky, Leonid
Bhardwaj, Rajinder
Smith, Patrick F.
Dang, Steve
Zwanziger, Elke
Nasmyth‐Miller, Clare
Ravva, Patanjali
Pharmacologic effects of oseltamivir in immunocompromised adult patients as assessed by population PK/PD analysis and drug‐disease modelling for dosing regimen optimization
title Pharmacologic effects of oseltamivir in immunocompromised adult patients as assessed by population PK/PD analysis and drug‐disease modelling for dosing regimen optimization
title_full Pharmacologic effects of oseltamivir in immunocompromised adult patients as assessed by population PK/PD analysis and drug‐disease modelling for dosing regimen optimization
title_fullStr Pharmacologic effects of oseltamivir in immunocompromised adult patients as assessed by population PK/PD analysis and drug‐disease modelling for dosing regimen optimization
title_full_unstemmed Pharmacologic effects of oseltamivir in immunocompromised adult patients as assessed by population PK/PD analysis and drug‐disease modelling for dosing regimen optimization
title_short Pharmacologic effects of oseltamivir in immunocompromised adult patients as assessed by population PK/PD analysis and drug‐disease modelling for dosing regimen optimization
title_sort pharmacologic effects of oseltamivir in immunocompromised adult patients as assessed by population pk/pd analysis and drug‐disease modelling for dosing regimen optimization
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8246794/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32808306
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bcp.14523
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