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Reinhard Baildon, M. D. Executive Director
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tarix | 26.02.2017 | ölçüsü | 460 b. | | #9749 |
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Reinhard Baildon, M.D. Clinical Development Pfizer Global Research & Development
Voriconazole Introduction In vitro and in vivo Data Clinical Pharmacology Efficacy Safety Conclusion
Voriconazole Development Program First in human: 1991 IND for oral/IV: 08/95, 04/96 NDA submitted 11/00 Extensive, frequent discussion with Division Collaboration with NIAID Mycoses Study Group (MSG) and European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) External Data Review Committees (DRCs) for rigorous, blinded efficacy assessments
Sponsor Section Craig Brater, MD University of Indiana John Camm, MD St. George’s Hospital George Drusano, MD Albany Medical College Frederick Fraunfelder, MD Casey Eye Institute Willis Maddrey, MD University of Texas, Dallas Thomas Patterson, MD University of Texas, San Antonio Guy Paulus, MD, PhD Consultant John Rex, MD University of Texas, Houston Robert Rubin, MD Harvard University Jeremy Ruskin, MD Massachusetts General Hospital Eugene Schiff, MD University of Miami Thomas Walsh, MD National Cancer Institute Paul Watkins, MD University of North Carolina Andrew Whelton, MD Consultant
Voriconazole Superior outcome and survival benefit in primary therapy of acute invasive aspergillosis Efficacy in patients with Scedosporium and Fusarium infections Efficacy in Candida infections Appropriate option for empirical therapy Better tolerated than amphotericin B formulations
Voriconazole Clinical Program Invasive Aspergillosis - Global Comparative Aspergillosis Study (307/602)
- Non-Comparative Aspergillosis Study (304)
- Historical Control Study (1003)
Emerging Pathogens - Scedosporium Infections
- Fusarium Infections
Candida Infections - Esophageal Candidiasis Study (305)
- Pooled Efficacy Data
Empirical Therapy Study (603/MSG42)
Voriconazole
Voriconazole Introduction In vitro and in vivo Data Clinical Pharmacology Efficacy Safety Conclusion
Esophageal Candidiasis Study (305) MIC Data for Candida Isolates
Esophageal Candidiasis Study (305) Clinical Isolate Susceptibilities (N = 633)
Global Comparative Aspergillosis Study (307/602) MIC Data for Aspergillus Isolates
Voriconazole In Vivo Model Immunocompromised guinea pigs (cyclophosphamide and dexamethasone) - Dunkin Hartley guinea pigs
- > 90% reduction in neutrophils
- Direct IV inoculation
- Efficacy measured
- Survival
- Cure
- Tissue burden
Neutropenic Guinea Pig Model Disseminated Invasive Aspergillosis
Voriconazole In vitro potency against yeasts 60-fold higher than for fluconazole Cidality against Aspergillus and other moulds In vitro potency translates into in vivo efficacy in severely immunocompromised animals
Voriconazole Introduction In vitro and in vivo Data Clinical Pharmacology Efficacy Safety Conclusion
Voriconazole Clinical Pharmacology Absorption and distribution Metabolism and excretion Non-linear pharmacokinetics Loading dose regimen Factors influencing pharmacokinetic variability Drug-drug interactions
Voriconazole Oral bioavailability of 96% Volume of distribution of 4.6 L/kg Plasma protein binding 58%
Voriconazole Tissue Distribution in Animals Concentrations of radioactivity in male rat tissue at 5 minutes post infusion Cerebrospinal fluid/plasma concentration ratio = 0.8 in guinea pigs at steady state after multiple dosing*
Voriconazole Metabolism and Excretion Metabolized primarily by the hepatic cytochrome P450 isoenzymes CYP2C19, CYP2C9 and CYP3A4 CYP2C19 exhibits genetic polymorphism Extensive metabolism to a major circulating N-oxide metabolite (72% at 1 hour) and several minor metabolites Metabolite present in toxicology species, does not contribute to efficacy Less than 2% of a dose excreted unchanged in the urine
Voriconazole Non-linear Pharmacokinetics Due to saturation of metabolism (Michaelis-Menten kinetics) Greater than proportional increase in exposure with increasing dose On average, 1.5-fold oral dose escalation from 200 mg q 12 h to 300 mg q 12 h will lead to a 2.5-fold increase in exposure
Voriconazole Loading Dose Regimen (Study 247)
Voriconazole Factors Influencing Pharmacokinetic Variability CYP2C19 genotype Race Children (2 - < 12 years) Body weight Hepatic impairment Renal impairment Concomitant medications
Voriconazole Factors Influencing Pharmacokinetic Variability CYP2C19 genotype Race Gender and age in adults Children (2 - < 12 years) Body weight Hepatic impairment Renal impairment Concomitant medications
Voriconazole Factors Influencing Pharmacokinetic Variability CYP2C19 genotype Race Gender and age in adults Children (2 - < 12 years) Body weight Hepatic impairment Renal impairment Concomitant medications
Voriconazole Factors Influencing Pharmacokinetic Variability CYP2C19 genotype Race Gender and age in adults Children (2 - < 12 years): maintenance dose of 4mg/kg IV q 12 h Body weight Hepatic impairment Renal impairment Concomitant medications
Voriconazole Factors Influencing Pharmacokinetic Variability CYP2C19 genotype Race Gender and age in adults Children (2 - < 12 years) Body weight: under 40 kg halve oral maintenance dose Hepatic impairment Renal impairment Concomitant medications
Voriconazole Factors Influencing Pharmacokinetic Variability CYP2C19 genotype Race Gender and age in adults Children (2 - < 12 years) Body weight Hepatic impairment: halve maintenance dose Renal impairment Concomitant medications
Voriconazole Factors Influencing Pharmacokinetic Variability CYP2C19 genotype Race Gender and age in adults Children (2 - < 12 years) Body weight Hepatic impairment Renal impairment: use oral in patients with serum creatinine > 2.5 mg/dL Concomitant medications
Voriconazole Factors Influencing Pharmacokinetic Variability CYP2C19 genotype Race Gender and age in adults Children (2 - < 12 years) Body weight Hepatic impairment Renal impairment Concomitant medications: drug-drug interactions
Voriconazole Drug-drug Interactions Explored in 19 studies including 365 volunteers Effect of voriconazole on 11 other drugs Recommendations Contraindications Dose adjustments of voriconazole or concomitant medications Monitor concentrations or effects of concomitant medications No adjustments needed
Voriconazole Drug-drug Interactions: Contraindications The following drugs are contraindicated: Rifampin*, barbiturates (long-acting), carbamazepine (decreased voriconazole exposure) Sirolimus*, terfenadine, astemizole, cisapride, pimozide, quinidine, ergot alkaloids (voriconazole increases exposure to these medications)
Voriconazole Drug-drug Interactions: Dose Adjustment
Voriconazole Drug-drug Interactions: Dose Adjustment
Voriconazole Drug-drug Interactions No dose adjustment required when voriconazole is administered with: - Macrolide antibiotics
- Indinavir
- Cimetidine
- Ranitidine
- Digoxin
- Mycophenolate
- Prednisolone
Voriconazole Summary of Pharmacokinetics Rapid and consistent absorption with high oral bioavailability (96%) Large volume of distribution (4.6 L/kg) Non-linear elimination Hepatic metabolism by CYP2C19, 2C9 and 3A4 isoenzymes Increased exposure in cirrhosis Metabolic drug interactions well-characterized
Voriconazole Superior outcome and survival benefit in primary therapy of acute invasive aspergillosis Efficacy in patients with Scedosporium and Fusarium infections Efficacy in Candida infections Appropriate option for empirical therapy Better tolerated than amphotericin B formulations Acceptable overall safety profile Manageable drug-drug interactions
Voriconazole Factors Affecting Dose Selection
Voriconazole Dose Selection Target maximum tolerated dose
Voriconazole Dosage and Administration
Voriconazole Introduction In vitro and in vivo data Clinical Pharmacology Efficacy Safety Conclusion
Voriconazole Safety Database
Voriconazole Overall Patient Exposure
Voriconazole Target Population Severe underlying disease Multiple interventions, eg bone marrow transplant - 26.9% of patients in Global Comparative Aspergillosis Study (307/602)
- 49.8% of patients in Empirical Therapy Study (603)
Multiple concomitant medications - Mean of 26 in Global Comparative Aspergillosis Study (307/602)
- Mean of 23 in Empirical Therapy Study (603)
Overview of Safety Presentation Deaths and discontinuations Adverse events Special safety topics - Emerging clinical, animal, published data
- Thorough investigation
Voriconazole Deaths - Safety Populations
Global Comparative Aspergillosis Study (307/602) Time to Death (Safety Population)
Discontinuations Due to Adverse Events and Laboratory Abnormalities
Healthy Volunteers Most Frequent Voriconazole Adverse Events
Global Comparative Aspergillosis Study (307/602) Most Frequent Voriconazole Adverse Events
Empirical Therapy Study (603/MSG42) Most Frequent Voriconazole Adverse Events
Esophageal Candidiasis Study (305) Most Frequent Voriconazole Adverse Events
Voriconazole Special Safety Topics Visual disturbances Hepatic adverse events Other topics - Cardiac adverse events
- Anaphylactoid reactions
- Renal function
- Sepsis
- Hallucinations
Voriconazole Frequency of Abnormal Vision
Descriptions of Visual Disturbances - “Brightness of lights”, “brightness of vision”, “feeling of strong brightness”, “objects appear bright”
Blurred vision - “Smoke in eyes”, “fuzzy vision”, “hazy eyesight”, “vision blurring”
Photophobia - “Severe dazzling”, “light sensitivity”, “flash in eyes with dazzling”
Color vision changes - “Yellow fog”, “colors more vivid”, “difficult to distinguish blue and green”
NDA Therapeutic Studies Distribution of Time to First Visual Disturbance
Multiple Dose Visual Function Study (1004) Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel group study (N = 18/group), treatment duration 28.5 days - Oral voriconazole
- Usual loading dose regimen, followed by 300 mg q 12 h
ERG at screening and on Days 1, 8, 29 and 43 Tests on Days 3, 7, 28 and 42 - Farnsworth-Munsell 100 Hue test
- Humphrey Visual field test
- Slit lamp test
- Visual acuity test
- External eye examinations
- Funduscopy (indirect and direct)
Multiple Dose Visual Function Study (1004)
Multiple Dose Visual Function Study (1004)
Multiple Dose Visual Function Study (1004) Left Eye Visual Acuity - Change from Baseline
Esophageal Candidiasis Study (305) Visual Acuity - Change from Baseline*
Visual Disturbances: Conclusions Most frequent adverse drug reaction Site of action: Retina determined by electroretinography (ERG) - Decreased amplitude of ERG waveform in human and dog
No structural alterations in retina or visual pathways in 6 and 12 month dog studies Occur early in course of therapy and dosing Functional changes reversible after discontinuation
Voriconazole Special Safety Topics Visual disturbances Hepatic adverse events Skin reactions Other topics - Cardiac adverse events
- Anaphylactoid reactions
- Renal function
- Sepsis
- Hallucinations
Multiple Dose Escalation IV/Oral Switch Study (230) Hepatic Function in Volunteers
Multiple Dose Escalation IV/Oral Switch Study (230) Hepatic Function in Volunteers
Voriconazole Frequency of Abnormal ALT (> 3 x ULN)
Voriconazole Frequency of Abnormal Total Bilirubin (> 1.5 X ULN)
Frequency of Hepatic Failure and Death Serious Adverse Events
Hepatic Failure and Death Causal Relationship not Excluded by Investigator or Sponsor
Hepatic Conclusions Comparative studies hepatic adverse effects - Similar frequency for voriconazole and amphotericin B formulations
- Greater frequency for voriconazole than for fluconazole
Monitoring of hepatic function is recommended
Voriconazole Special Safety Topics Visual disturbances Hepatic adverse events Skin reactions Other topics - Cardiac adverse events
- Anaphylactoid reactions
- Renal function
- Sepsis
- Hallucinations
Descriptions of Skin Adverse Events Rash - “rash on trunk and arms”, “facial erythema”, “exanthema”, “generalized erythema”, “head, neck and shoulder erythema”, “neck redness”, “dermatitis”, “allergic skin reaction”
Photosensitivity Reaction - “photosensitivity skin reaction”, “photosensitization of face”, “photosensitivity rash”, “skin rash in sun exposed regions”, “sunburn”
Frequency of Rash
Frequency of Photosensitivity Reaction
Skin Conclusions In comparative studies, skin adverse effects occurred with a similar frequency in voriconazole, amphotericin B- and fluconazole-treated patients Photosensitivity potential cannot be excluded
Voriconazole Special Safety Topics Visual disturbances Hepatic adverse events Skin reactions Other topics - Cardiac adverse events
- Anaphylactoid reactions
- Renal function
- Sepsis
- Hallucinations
Other Safety Issues Cardiac adverse events - One cardiac death
- Thorough in vitro, Phase 1 and clinical investigations
Anaphylactoid reactions Renal function - Proposed to monitor creatinine
Sepsis and host resistance - No association identified
Hallucinations
Voriconazole Sudden Cardiac Death Patient 603/1485 52 year old white female, acute myeloid leukemia Previous idarubicin therapy, dilated left ventricle, history of benign ventricular arrhythmias Hypokalemia (3.1 mmol/L; normal = 3.5 - 5.1) Hypophosphatemia (0.49 mmol/L; normal = 1.13 - 1.60) KCl infusion plus 30 mEq bolus administered prior to voriconazole, phosphorous not replaced Seizure and cardiac arrest after voriconazole infusion Death attributed to ventricular fibrillation, medullary hypoplasia, myeloid leukemia by investigator Sponsor could not exclude contribution of voriconazole
In vitro Studies of Voriconazole and Ketoconazole
Phase 1: Frequency of Borderline and Abnormal QTc (Fridericia Correction)
Voriconazole Phase I ECG Analysis QTc (Fridericia) 1 hour post single dose
Anaphylactoid Reactions
Empirical Therapy Study (603/MSG42) Infusion Related Reactions (MITT) - All*
Other Safety Issues Cardiac adverse events - One cardiac death
- Thorough in vitro, Phase 1 and clinical investigations
Anaphylactoid reactions Renal function - Proposed to monitor creatinine
Sepsis and host resistance - No association identified
Hallucinations - Role for voriconazole not excluded
- No impact on therapy
Safety Conclusions Visual disturbances - Site of action is the retina
- No structural alterations in retina or visual pathways in 6 and 12 month dog studies
- Functional changes reversible after discontinuation
Hepatic adverse events - Enzyme elevations reversible after dose reduction/withdrawal
- In comparative studies frequency similar to that seen in amphotericin B-treated patients, greater frequency than in fluconazole-treated patients
- Monitoring of hepatic function is recommended
Skin reactions - In comparative studies, skin adverse effects occurred with a similar frequency as for comparators
- Photosensitivity potential cannot be excluded
Voriconazole Superior outcome and survival benefit in primary therapy of acute invasive aspergillosis Efficacy in patients with Scedosporium and Fusarium infections Efficacy in Candida infections Appropriate option for empirical therapy Better tolerated than amphotericin B formulations Acceptable overall safety profile Manageable drug-drug interactions
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