Rosario Maria C, Poland Bill, Sullivan John, Westby Mike, van der Ryst Elna
Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Pfizer Clinical R and D, Groton, CT 06340, USA.
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2006 Jun;42(2):183-91. doi: 10.1097/01.qai.0000220021.64115.37.
To use a viral dynamics model to compare the effectiveness of in vivo viral inhibition of several doses of maraviroc (MVC;UK-427,857) and to use a modeling approach to support design decisions for a monotherapy study using various dosing regimens of maraviroc given with and without food.
The pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic model was developed using clinical data from a first monotherapy study (study A4001007). This was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter study of maraviroc in 44 asymptomatic HIV-1-infected patients. Patients received maraviroc under food restrictions at 25 mg once daily or 50, 100, or 300 mg twice daily, or placebo for 10 days.
Antiviral responses were assessed by measuring plasma HIV-1 RNA levels during screening, during randomization, at baseline, and daily during the 10 days of treatment and at days 11 to 15, 19, 22, 25, and 40. An integrated pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic model was developed using the mixed effects modeling approach with patients' pharmacokinetic profiles on the last day of treatment, HIV-1 RNA levels over time, and the individual viral susceptibility. The parameters derived from the viral dynamic model were used to calculate average viral inhibition fraction, decay rate of actively infected cells, and basic reproductive ratio for each treatment group. Monte Carlo simulation was then used to determine the distribution of viral load change across simulated patients over time for each regimen to be studied in another monotherapy study, A4001015.
The decline rate in the 300 mg twice daily group was comparable to that induced by potent protease inhibitor monotherapy, but was significantly slower than that in patients receiving combination therapy including both protease inhibitor and reverse transcriptase inhibitors. The efficacy of inhibition in vivo was estimated to range from 0.15 to 0.38 for the 25 mg once daily dose group and from 0.88 to 0.96 for the 300 mg twice daily dose group.
The model has aided the analysis and interpretation of the clinical data. The use of a model-based approach for selecting doses can accelerate drug development by replacing some arms or trials with simulations.
使用病毒动力学模型比较几种剂量的马拉维若(MVC;UK - 427,857)在体内抑制病毒的效果,并采用建模方法为一项单药治疗研究的设计决策提供支持,该研究使用不同给药方案的马拉维若,且考虑进食与不进食的情况。
药代动力学 - 药效学模型是利用来自首个单药治疗研究(研究A4001007)的临床数据建立的。这是一项针对44例无症状HIV - 1感染患者的随机、双盲、安慰剂对照、多中心马拉维若研究。患者在食物限制条件下接受治疗,分别为每日一次25毫克、每日两次50毫克、100毫克或300毫克的马拉维若,或安慰剂,为期10天。
通过在筛查、随机分组、基线时以及治疗的10天内每日测量血浆HIV - 1 RNA水平,并在第11至15天、19天、22天、25天和40天进行测量,来评估抗病毒反应。采用混合效应建模方法,结合患者在治疗最后一天的药代动力学特征、HIV - 1 RNA水平随时间的变化以及个体病毒易感性,建立了一个综合药代动力学 - 药效学模型。从病毒动力学模型得出的参数用于计算每个治疗组的平均病毒抑制分数、活跃感染细胞的衰减率和基本繁殖率。然后使用蒙特卡罗模拟来确定在另一项单药治疗研究A4001015中要研究的每种给药方案下,模拟患者随时间的病毒载量变化分布。
每日两次300毫克组的下降速率与强效蛋白酶抑制剂单药治疗所诱导的下降速率相当,但明显慢于接受包括蛋白酶抑制剂和逆转录酶抑制剂的联合治疗的患者。每日一次25毫克剂量组的体内抑制效果估计在0.15至0.38之间,每日两次300毫克剂量组在0.88至0.96之间。
该模型有助于对临床数据进行分析和解释。使用基于模型的方法选择剂量可以通过用模拟替代一些分组或试验来加速药物研发。