Everolimus permits reduced calcineurin inhibitor (CNI) exposure, but the efficacy and safety outcomes of this treatment after kidney transplant require confirmation. In a multicenter noninferiority trial, we randomized 2037 kidney transplant recipients to receive, in combination with induction therapy and corticosteroids, everolimus with reduced-exposure CNI (everolimus arm) or mycophenolic acid (MPA) with standard-exposure CNI (MPA arm). The primary end point was treated biopsy-proven acute rejection or eGFR<50 ml/min per 1.73 m at post-transplant month 12 using a 10% noninferiority margin. In the intent-to-treat population (everolimus =1022, MPA=1015), the primary end point incidence was 48.2% (493) with everolimus and 45.1% (457) with MPA (difference 3.2%; 95% confidence interval, -1.3% to 7.6%). Similar between-treatment differences in incidence were observed in the subgroups of patients who received tacrolimus or cyclosporine. Treated biopsy-proven acute rejection, graft loss, or death at post-transplant month 12 occurred in 14.9% and 12.5% of patients treated with everolimus and MPA, respectively (difference 2.3%; 95% confidence interval, -1.7% to 6.4%). donor-specific antibody incidence at 12 months and antibody-mediated rejection rate did not differ between arms. Cytomegalovirus (3.6% versus 13.3%) and BK virus infections (4.3% versus 8.0%) were less frequent in the everolimus arm than in the MPA arm. Overall, 23.0% and 11.9% of patients treated with everolimus and MPA, respectively, discontinued the study drug because of adverse events. In kidney transplant recipients at mild-to-moderate immunologic risk, everolimus was noninferior to MPA for a binary composite end point assessing immunosuppressive efficacy and preservation of graft function.
bQDMRK was a phase III clinical trial of raltegravir given once daily (QD) (800-mg dose) versus twice daily (BID) (400 mg per dose), each in combination with once-daily coformulated tenofovir-emtricitabine, in treatment-naive HIV-infected patients. Pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) analyses were conducted using a 2-step approach: individual non-model-based PK parameters from observed sparse concentration data were determined, followed by statistical analysis of potential relationships between PK and efficacy response parameters after 48 weeks of treatment. Sparse PK sampling was performed for all patients (QD, n ؍ 380; BID, n ؍ 384); selected sites performed an intensive PK evaluation at week 4 (QD, n ؍ 22; BID, n ؍ 20). In the intensive PK subgroup, daily exposures (area under the concentration-time curve from 0 to 24 h [AUC 0 -24 ]) were similar between the two regimens, but patients on 800 mg QD experienced ϳ4-fold-higher maximum drug concentration in plasma (C max ) values and ϳ6-fold-lower trough drug concentration (C trough ) values than those on 400 mg BID. Geometric mean (GM) C trough values were similarly lower in the sparse PK analysis. With BID dosing, there was no indication of any significant PK/PD association over the range of tested PK parameters. With QD dosing, C trough values correlated with the likelihood of virologic response. Failure to achieve an HIV RNA level of <50 copies/ml appeared predominantly at high baseline HIV RNA levels in both treatment arms and was associated with lower values of GM C trough in the 800-mg-QD arm, though other possible drivers of efficacy, such as time above a threshold concentration, could not be evaluated due to the sparse sampling scheme. Together, these findings emphasize the importance of the shape of the plasma concentration-versus-time curve for longterm efficacy.
AIMSThis study aimed to assess changes in the plasma concentrationss of 4β-hydroxycholesterol (4βHC) against intravenous (i.v.) and oral midazolam (MDZ) pharmacokinetics (PK) after administration of a potent CYP3A inhibitor [ketoconazole (KETO)] and inducer [rifampicin (RIF)]. METHODSThirty-two healthy subjects (HS) were allocated into three groups of 12 each in KETO and RIF and 10 in a placebo group (PLB). All HS were randomized to receive oral and i.v. MDZ on day 1 or 2 and on day 15 or 16 after receiving RIF (600 mg once daily), KETO (400 mg once daily) or PLB for 2 weeks. Subjects were followed until day 30. The effect of treatments on 4βHC was assessed by analyzing % change from baseline using a linear spline mixed effects model. RESULTSCompared with PLB, KETO decreased 4βHC mean values up to 13% (P = 0.003) and RIF increased 4βHC mean values up to 220% (P < 0.001). Within 14 days of stopping KETO and RIF, 4βHC had either returned to baseline (KETO) or was still returning to baseline (RIF). Compared with baseline, mean oral MDZ AUC increased by 11-fold (90% CI ranging from 9-fold to 13-fold increase) and decreased by 92% (90% CI ranging from 90% to 95% decrease) after KETO and RIF, respectively. Similar trends were observed for 6β-hydroxycortisol : cortisol (6βHCL : CL) urinary ratios. CONCLUSIONSChanges in plasma 4βHC can be utilized as a surrogate for MDZ PK after multiple doses of potent CYP3A inducers. There is a more limited dynamic range for 4βHC for assessment of potential CYP3A inhibitors. 4βHC is a valuable tool for the assessment of potential CYP3A inducers in early drug development. WHAT IS ALREADY KNOWN ABOUT THIS SUBJECT• Endogenous plasma 4β-hydroxycholesterol (4βHC) concentrations have been used as a putative CYP3A activity marker. However, placebo controlled studies have not been conducted to assess the dynamic range of potent CYP3A inhibitors and inducers. WHAT THIS STUDY ADDS• This placebo-controlled study assessed the dynamic range of plasma 4βHC concentrations after administration of ketoconazole and rifampicin (for 14 days). A comparison is made with other CYP3A trait measures such as midazolam pharmacokinetics and putative endogenous CYP3A biomarkers. The time course of CYP3A activity before and after administration of CYP3A modulators is also examined. This study validates 4βHC against midazolam pharmacokinetics and also expands the utility of 4βHC to assess CYP3A activity after stopping treatment with CYP3A inducers or inhibitors.• Results from this study show utility of 4βHC to defer or avoid midazolam-based studies, saving cost and avoiding exposing healthy subjects to study medications.
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