pharmacodynamic modeling
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2022 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hai-ni Wen ◽  
Chen-yu Wang ◽  
Jin-meng Li ◽  
Zheng Jiao

The cardiotoxicity of anti-cancer drugs presents as a challenge to both clinicians and patients. Significant advances in cancer treatments have improved patient survival rates, but have also led to the chronic effects of anti-cancer therapies becoming more prominent. Additionally, it is difficult to clinically predict the occurrence of cardiovascular toxicities given that they can be transient or irreversible, with large between-subject variabilities. Further, cardiotoxicities present a range of different symptoms and pathophysiological mechanisms. These notwithstanding, mechanistic pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacodynamic (PD) modeling offers an important approach to predict cardiotoxicities and offering precise cardio-oncological care. Efforts have been made to integrate the structures of physiological and pharmacological networks into PK-PD modeling to the end of predicting cardiotoxicities based on clinical evaluation as well as individual variabilities, such as protein expression, and physiological changes under different disease states. Thus, this review aims to report recent progress in the use of PK-PD modeling to predict cardiovascular toxicities, as well as its application in anti-cancer therapies.


Author(s):  
Alison R Novak ◽  
Martin Krsak ◽  
Tyree H Kiser ◽  
Robert T Neumann ◽  
Luis Cava Prado ◽  
...  

Abstract: Background The relative distribution of cefazolin into the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) remains debated. Determining the distribution of cefazolin to the CSF in non-infected adults may allow for further treatment applications of cefazolin. This prospective pharmacokinetic study aimed to determine the pharmacokinetic parameters of cefazolin in serum and CSF from external ventricular drains (EVD) in neurologically injured adults. Methods Blood and CSF was collected, using a biologic waste protocol, for cefazolin quantification and trapezoidal rule based pharmacokinetic analysis in a total of 15 critically ill adults receiving 2000mg IV every 8 hours or the renal dose equivalent for EVD prophylaxis. Results A median of 3 blood (range 2-4) and 3 CSF (range 2-5) samples were collected in each patient. The most common admitting diagnosis was subarachnoid hemorrhage (66.7%). Median calculated cefazolin CSF Cmax and Cmin (IQR) were 2.97mg/L (1.76-8.56) and 1.59mg/L (0.77-2.17), respectively. Median (IQR) CSF to serum area under-the-curve ratio was 6.7% (3.7%-10.6%), with time matched estimates providing a similar estimate (8.4%). Of those receiving cefazolin every 8 hours, the median and minimum directly measured CSF cefazolin concentration 4 hours or greater following administration were 1.87 and 0.78 mg/L, respectively. Conclusion Cefazolin dosed for EVD prophylaxis achieved CSF concentrations suggesting viability as a therapeutic option for patients with meningitis or ventriculitis due to susceptible bacteria such as methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus. Further clinical trials are required to confirm a role in therapy for cefazolin. Population-based pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic modeling may suggest an optimal cefazolin regimen for the treatment of central nervous system infections.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dongna Zou ◽  
Guangyue Yao ◽  
Chengwu Shen ◽  
Jinru Ji ◽  
Chaoqun Ying ◽  
...  

Introduction: The aim of this study was to predict and evaluate three antimicrobials for treatment of adult bloodstream infections (BSI) with carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE) in China, so as to optimize the clinical dosing regimen further.Methods: Antimicrobial susceptibility data of blood isolates were obtained from the Blood Bacterial Resistance Investigation Collaborative Systems in China. Monte Carlo simulation was conducted to estimate the probability target attainment (PTA) and cumulative fraction of response (CFR) of tigecycline, polymyxin B, and ceftazidime/avibactam against CRE.Results: For the results of PTAs, tigecycline following administration of 50 mg every 12 h, 75 mg every 12 h, and 100 mg every 12 h achieved > 90% PTAs when minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) was 0.25, 0.5, and 0.5 μg/mL, respectively; polymyxin B following administration of all tested regimens achieved > 90% PTAs when MIC was 1 μg/mL with CRE; ceftazidime/avibactam following administration of 1.25 g every 8 h, 2.5 g every 8 h achieved > 90% PTAs when MIC was 4 μg/mL, 8 μg/mL with CRE, respectively. As for CFR values of three antimicrobials, ceftazidime/avibactam achieved the lowest CFR values. The highest CFR value of ceftazidime/avibactam was 77.42%. For tigecycline and ceftazidime/avibactam, with simulated regimens daily dosing increase, the CFR values were both increased; the highest CFR of tigecycline values was 91.88%. For polymyxin B, the most aggressive dosage of 1.5 mg/kg every 12 h could provide the highest CFR values (82.69%) against CRE.Conclusion: This study suggested that measurement of MICs and individualized therapy should be considered together to achieve the optimal drug exposure. In particular, pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic modeling based on local antimicrobial resistance data can provide valuable guidance for clinicians for the administration of empirical antibiotic treatments for BSIs.


Author(s):  
Li Yan ◽  
Bing Wang ◽  
Dewei She ◽  
Ben Mitchel ◽  
Ryan Criste ◽  
...  

AIM: Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders (NMOSD) is an autoantibody-mediated, B cell-driven disease. Inebilizumab is a humanized, affinity-optimized, afucosylated IgG1 kappa monoclonal antibody that binds to the B cell specific surface antigen CD19, resulting in rapid, profound, and sustained depletion of circulating peripheral B cells in NMOSD subjects (pivotal study). The objective of this study was to conduct population modeling of B cell response following inebilizumab treatment in adult subjects with NMOSD, and to assess the impact of drug exposure to outcome. METHODS: A hematopoietic transit model was developed to describe the joint effects of reducing influx from pro-B cells and accelerating CD20+ B cell depletion in the blood by inebilizumab. Furthermore, the relationships between inebilizumab pharmacokinetic (PK) exposure and the primary efficacy endpoint and key secondary efficacy endpoints were evaluated. KEY RESULTS: At the 300 mg dose, there was no apparent relationship between efficacy (reduction in disease attack risk, risk of worsening from baseline in Expanded Disability Status Scale, cumulative total active MRI lesions, and the number of NMOSD-related in-patient hospitalizations) and PK exposure. Subjects with low, medium, and high PK exposure had a similar hazard ratio of NMOSD attack vs placebo group. CONCLUSIONS: The pharmacodynamic modeling confirmed effective depletion of B cells is achieved with a 300 mg intravenous dose of inebilizumab administered on Day 1 and Day 15 and every 6 months thereafter. The PK variability between patients had no apparent effect on clinical efficacy.


Author(s):  
Cindy X. Zhang ◽  
Melissa S. Love ◽  
Case W. McNamara ◽  
Victor Chi ◽  
Ashley K. Woods ◽  
...  

Infection with Cryptosporidium spp. can cause severe diarrhea leading to long-term adverse impacts and even death in malnourished children and immunocompromised patients. The only FDA-approved drug for treating cryptosporidiosis, nitazoxanide, has limited efficacy in the populations impacted the most by the diarrheal disease, and safe, effective treatment options are urgently needed. Initially identified by a large-scale phenotypic screening campaign, the antimycobacterial therapeutic clofazimine demonstrated great promise in both in vitro and in vivo preclinical models of Cryptosporidium infection. Unfortunately, a Phase 2a clinical trial in HIV infected adults with cryptosporidiosis did not identify any clofazimine treatment effect on Cryptosporidium infection burden or clinical outcomes. To explore whether clofazimine’s lack of efficacy in the Phase 2a trial may have been due to subtherapeutic clofazimine concentrations, a pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic modeling approach was undertaken to determine the relationship between clofazimine in vivo concentrations and treatment effects in multiple preclinical infection models. Exposure-response relationships were characterized using E max and logistic models which allowed predictions of efficacious clofazimine concentrations for the control and reduction of disease burden. After establishing exposure-response relationships for clofazimine treatment of Cryptosporidium infection in our preclinical model studies, it was unmistakable that the clofazimine levels observed in the Phase 2a study participants were well below concentrations associated with anti- Cryptosporidium efficacy. Thus, despite a dosing regimen above the highest doses recommended for mycobacterial therapy, it is very likely the lack of treatment effect in the Phase 2a trial was at least partially due to clofazimine concentrations below those required for efficacy against cryptosporidiosis. It is unlikely that clofazimine will provide a remedy for the large number of cryptosporidiosis patients currently without a viable treatment option unless alternative, safe clofazimine formulations with improved oral absorption are developed.


Antibiotics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 1363
Author(s):  
Saeed Alqahtani ◽  
Asma Alfarhan ◽  
Abdullah Alsultan ◽  
Emad Alsarhani ◽  
Abdulaziz Alsubaie ◽  
...  

Micafungin is widely used for invasive candidiasis, especially in critically ill patients and those with cancer, and for empirical antifungal therapy in patients with neutropenic fever. This is the first study to investigate the pharmacokinetics and disposition parameters of micafungin in patients with cancer. In this observational pharmacokinetic study, blood samples were collected and analyzed using high-performance liquid chromatography. Pharmacokinetic parameters were estimated using Monolix 4.4 software. The plasma micafungin concentrations were measured in a total of 133 samples from 19 patients. In the final two-compartment model with linear elimination, the estimated micafungin clearance (CL) was significantly higher in patients with cancer than in those without cancer (1.2 vs. 0.6 L/h, p = 0.012), whereas other parameters did not significantly differ between the two groups. Aspartate and alanine transaminases and body weight significantly influenced micafungin CL in patients, with and without cancer. Overall, the probability of target attainment increased with increasing doses and decreased with higher MICs in both groups. In simulations, the patients without cancer achieved higher pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic targets with a 90% probability for all simulated doses, compared to the patients with cancer. Micafungin demonstrated dose-proportional linear pharmacokinetics in both the patients with and those without cancer. The estimated micafungin CL was significantly higher in patients with cancer, suggesting a need for increased dosage, especially for Candida spp. with high MICs, in these patients. Further studies should assess the efficacy and optimum dosage of micafungin for the treatment and prevention of febrile neutropenia (FN) in patients with cancer.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A296-A296
Author(s):  
Oleg Demin ◽  
Elena Vasileva

BackgroundALX148 is a fusion protein comprised of a high-affinity CD47 blocker linked to an inactive immunoglobulin Fc region. Optimal doses selection is increasingly important in clinical setup and can be guided by an assessment of target receptor occupancy (RO) and pharmacodynamics (PD) effect in the site of action. However, direct measurement of RO and PD effect in the tumor tissue is challenging. A mechanistic pharmacokinetic (PK)-PD model was developed to predict CD47 occupancy and PD effect in tumor tissues for ALX148.MethodsThe developed semi-mechanistic PK/RO/PD model describes the PK of ALX148 and its distribution to non-Hodgkin lymphoma tumor tissues (lymph nodes, spleen, and bone marrow). The model includes non-linear clearance of ALX148 due to target CD47 receptor binding and further internalization of the complex. CD47 RO was described on red blood cells and tumor cells taking into account the number of cells and CD47 expression (molecules per cell). Parameters were fitted against clinical PK and in vitro data. In vitro data on stimulation of phagocytosis by ALX148 in the presence of antibodies inducing antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis (ADCP) was used to estimate the RO-PD relationship. Clinical data on RO in the periphery was used for model validation.ResultsThe model successfully described dose-dependence ALX148 clinical PK and RO data. Predicted trough median CD47 occupancy in the spleen, lymph nodes, and bone marrow during the treatment with 10 mg/kg QW ALX148 was 98% (95% confidence bands: 95%–99%), whereas 30 mg/kg Q2W resulted in 99% CD47 occupancy (95% confidence bands: 98%–99%). ADCP of cancer cells was predicted to be increased by ~1.8 times during the treatment with both regimens of ALX148: 10 mg/kg QW and 30 mg/kg Q2W. Dose 3 mg/kg resulted in the lower induction of ADCP than 10 mg/kg: 1.6 vs 1.8 (p-value < 0.001).ConclusionsThe model was successfully calibrated and validated against both in vitro and clinical data on ALX148. It was predicted that 10 mg/kg QW is an optimal dose of ALX148 to occupy more than 90% of CD47 in the tumor tissues to achieve maximal induction of phagocytosis caused by ADCP stimulating antibodies such as rituximab. This approach can be applied for the optimal dose selection of other anti-CD47 agents taking into account their specific features as binding properties, size, etc.


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