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Clinical and population‐based study design considerations to accelerate the investigation of new antiretrovirals during pregnancy

INTRODUCTION: Pregnant women are routinely excluded from clinical trials, leading to the absence or delay in even the most basic pharmacokinetic (PK) information needed for dosing in pregnancy. When available, pregnancy PK studies use a small sample size, resulting in limited safety information. We...

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Autores principales: Brummel, Sean S., Stringer, Jeff, Mills, Ed, Tierney, Camlin, Caniglia, Ellen C., Colbers, Angela, Chi, Benjamin H., Best, Brookie M., Gaaloul, Myriam El, Hillier, Sharon, Jourdain, Gonzague, Khoo, Saye H., Mofenson, Lynne M., Myer, Landon, Nachman, Sharon, Stranix‐Chibanda, Lynda, Clayden, Polly, Sachikonye, Memory, Lockman, Shahin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9294861/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35851758
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jia2.25917
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author Brummel, Sean S.
Stringer, Jeff
Mills, Ed
Tierney, Camlin
Caniglia, Ellen C.
Colbers, Angela
Chi, Benjamin H.
Best, Brookie M.
Gaaloul, Myriam El
Hillier, Sharon
Jourdain, Gonzague
Khoo, Saye H.
Mofenson, Lynne M.
Myer, Landon
Nachman, Sharon
Stranix‐Chibanda, Lynda
Clayden, Polly
Sachikonye, Memory
Lockman, Shahin
author_facet Brummel, Sean S.
Stringer, Jeff
Mills, Ed
Tierney, Camlin
Caniglia, Ellen C.
Colbers, Angela
Chi, Benjamin H.
Best, Brookie M.
Gaaloul, Myriam El
Hillier, Sharon
Jourdain, Gonzague
Khoo, Saye H.
Mofenson, Lynne M.
Myer, Landon
Nachman, Sharon
Stranix‐Chibanda, Lynda
Clayden, Polly
Sachikonye, Memory
Lockman, Shahin
author_sort Brummel, Sean S.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Pregnant women are routinely excluded from clinical trials, leading to the absence or delay in even the most basic pharmacokinetic (PK) information needed for dosing in pregnancy. When available, pregnancy PK studies use a small sample size, resulting in limited safety information. We discuss key study design elements that may enhance the timely availability of pregnancy data, including the role and timing of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) to evaluate pregnancy safety; efficacy and safety outcome measures; stand‐alone protocols, platform trials, single arm studies, sample size and the effect that follow‐up time during gestation has on analysis interpretations; and observational studies. DISCUSSION: Pregnancy PK should be studied during drug development, after dosing in non‐pregnant persons is established (unless non‐clinical or other data raise pregnancy concerns). RCTs should evaluate the safety during pregnancy of priority new HIV agents that are likely to be used by large numbers of females of childbearing age. Key endpoints for pregnancy safety studies include birth outcomes (prematurity, small for gestational age and stillbirth) and neonatal death, with traditional adverse events and infant growth also measured (congenital anomalies are best studied through surveillance). We recommend that viral efficacy be studied as a secondary endpoint of pregnancy RCTs, once PK studies confirm adequate drug exposure in pregnancy. RCTs typically use a stand‐alone protocol for new agents. In contrast, master protocols using a platform design can add agents over time, possibly speeding safety data ascertainment. To speed accrual, stand‐alone pregnancy trial protocols can include pre‐specified starting rules based upon adequate PK levels in pregnancy; and seamless master protocols or platform trials can include a pregnancy PK and safety component. When RCTs are unethical or cost‐prohibitive, observational studies should be conducted, preferably using target trial emulation to avoid bias. CONCLUSIONS: Pregnancy PK needs to be obtained earlier in drug evaluation. Timely RCTs are needed to understand safety in pregnancy for high‐priority new HIV agents. RCTs that enrol pregnant women should focus on outcomes unique to pregnancy, and observational studies should focus on questions that RCTs are not equipped to answer.
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spelling pubmed-92948612022-07-20 Clinical and population‐based study design considerations to accelerate the investigation of new antiretrovirals during pregnancy Brummel, Sean S. Stringer, Jeff Mills, Ed Tierney, Camlin Caniglia, Ellen C. Colbers, Angela Chi, Benjamin H. Best, Brookie M. Gaaloul, Myriam El Hillier, Sharon Jourdain, Gonzague Khoo, Saye H. Mofenson, Lynne M. Myer, Landon Nachman, Sharon Stranix‐Chibanda, Lynda Clayden, Polly Sachikonye, Memory Lockman, Shahin J Int AIDS Soc Article INTRODUCTION: Pregnant women are routinely excluded from clinical trials, leading to the absence or delay in even the most basic pharmacokinetic (PK) information needed for dosing in pregnancy. When available, pregnancy PK studies use a small sample size, resulting in limited safety information. We discuss key study design elements that may enhance the timely availability of pregnancy data, including the role and timing of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) to evaluate pregnancy safety; efficacy and safety outcome measures; stand‐alone protocols, platform trials, single arm studies, sample size and the effect that follow‐up time during gestation has on analysis interpretations; and observational studies. DISCUSSION: Pregnancy PK should be studied during drug development, after dosing in non‐pregnant persons is established (unless non‐clinical or other data raise pregnancy concerns). RCTs should evaluate the safety during pregnancy of priority new HIV agents that are likely to be used by large numbers of females of childbearing age. Key endpoints for pregnancy safety studies include birth outcomes (prematurity, small for gestational age and stillbirth) and neonatal death, with traditional adverse events and infant growth also measured (congenital anomalies are best studied through surveillance). We recommend that viral efficacy be studied as a secondary endpoint of pregnancy RCTs, once PK studies confirm adequate drug exposure in pregnancy. RCTs typically use a stand‐alone protocol for new agents. In contrast, master protocols using a platform design can add agents over time, possibly speeding safety data ascertainment. To speed accrual, stand‐alone pregnancy trial protocols can include pre‐specified starting rules based upon adequate PK levels in pregnancy; and seamless master protocols or platform trials can include a pregnancy PK and safety component. When RCTs are unethical or cost‐prohibitive, observational studies should be conducted, preferably using target trial emulation to avoid bias. CONCLUSIONS: Pregnancy PK needs to be obtained earlier in drug evaluation. Timely RCTs are needed to understand safety in pregnancy for high‐priority new HIV agents. RCTs that enrol pregnant women should focus on outcomes unique to pregnancy, and observational studies should focus on questions that RCTs are not equipped to answer. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022-07-19 /pmc/articles/PMC9294861/ /pubmed/35851758 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jia2.25917 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Journal of the International AIDS Society published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of the International AIDS Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Brummel, Sean S.
Stringer, Jeff
Mills, Ed
Tierney, Camlin
Caniglia, Ellen C.
Colbers, Angela
Chi, Benjamin H.
Best, Brookie M.
Gaaloul, Myriam El
Hillier, Sharon
Jourdain, Gonzague
Khoo, Saye H.
Mofenson, Lynne M.
Myer, Landon
Nachman, Sharon
Stranix‐Chibanda, Lynda
Clayden, Polly
Sachikonye, Memory
Lockman, Shahin
Clinical and population‐based study design considerations to accelerate the investigation of new antiretrovirals during pregnancy
title Clinical and population‐based study design considerations to accelerate the investigation of new antiretrovirals during pregnancy
title_full Clinical and population‐based study design considerations to accelerate the investigation of new antiretrovirals during pregnancy
title_fullStr Clinical and population‐based study design considerations to accelerate the investigation of new antiretrovirals during pregnancy
title_full_unstemmed Clinical and population‐based study design considerations to accelerate the investigation of new antiretrovirals during pregnancy
title_short Clinical and population‐based study design considerations to accelerate the investigation of new antiretrovirals during pregnancy
title_sort clinical and population‐based study design considerations to accelerate the investigation of new antiretrovirals during pregnancy
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9294861/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35851758
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jia2.25917
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