Marbury Thomas, Fox Jerry, Kaelin Byron, Pavliv Leo
Orlando Clinical Research Center, Inc., Orlando, FL.
Department of Research and Development, Cumberland Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Nashville, TN, USA.
Drug Des Devel Ther. 2017 Feb 13;11:373-382. doi: 10.2147/DDDT.S125459. eCollection 2017.
Conivaptan is an intravenous dual V/V vasopressin antagonist approved for the treatment of euvolemic and hypervolemic hyponatremia. Earlier studies showed that patients with moderate liver disease could be safely treated with conivaptan by reducing the dose by 50%, whereas patients with mild hepatic impairment needed no dose adjustment. The objective of this Phase 1, open-label study was to assess the pharmacokinetics, protein binding, and safety of 48 h of conivaptan infusion in individuals with severe hepatic impairment.
Eight subjects with severe hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh score 10-15) and nine subjects with normal liver function were enrolled. Intravenous conivaptan (20 mg) was given as a 30 min loading dose on Day 1 followed by two consecutive 20 mg continuous infusions over 24 h each. Subjects were monitored for adverse events and changes in clinical laboratory parameters. Plasma and urine pharmacokinetic samples were collected at defined times. Subjects were followed through Study Day 5.
Hepatically impaired individuals exhibited higher concentrations of plasma conivaptan throughout the treatment period. Overall exposure, as measured by area under the plasma conivaptan concentration-time curve from time zero through infinity (AUC), was ~60% higher in impaired individuals compared to those with normal liver function. Terminal elimination half-life was slightly longer in impaired subjects (12 h) as compared to normal subjects (9 h), and clearance was 65% higher in subjects with normal liver function, while urinary excretion was higher in impaired individuals. Albumin levels directly, and alkaline phosphatase inversely, correlated with conivaptan clearance.
A 20 mg conivaptan loading dose given >30 min followed by two daily infusions of 20 mg each was well tolerated by patients with severe hepatic impairment as monitored by adverse events and clinical laboratory values. Based on pharmacokinetic data, however, a 50% reduction in the conivaptan dose is recommended for patients with severe liver impairment.
考尼伐坦是一种静脉注射用的双重V1/V2血管加压素拮抗剂,已被批准用于治疗等容性和高容性低钠血症。早期研究表明,中度肝病患者可通过将考尼伐坦剂量减半而安全使用该药进行治疗,而轻度肝功能损害患者则无需调整剂量。这项1期开放标签研究的目的是评估考尼伐坦连续输注48小时在严重肝功能损害个体中的药代动力学、蛋白结合率及安全性。
招募了8名严重肝功能损害(Child-Pugh评分10 - 15)的受试者和9名肝功能正常的受试者。在第1天,静脉给予考尼伐坦20 mg作为30分钟的负荷剂量,随后连续两天每天24小时持续输注20 mg。监测受试者的不良事件及临床实验室参数变化。在规定时间采集血浆和尿液药代动力学样本。对受试者进行随访直至研究第5天。
在整个治疗期间,肝功能受损个体的血浆考尼伐坦浓度较高。通过血浆考尼伐坦浓度-时间曲线从零至无穷大的面积(AUC)测量,与肝功能正常的个体相比,肝功能受损个体的总体暴露量高约60%。与正常受试者(9小时)相比,肝功能受损受试者的终末消除半衰期略长(12小时),肝功能正常受试者的清除率高65%,而肝功能受损个体的尿排泄量更高。白蛋白水平与考尼伐坦清除率呈正相关,碱性磷酸酶则呈负相关。
严重肝功能损害患者在输注考尼伐坦负荷剂量20 mg超过30分钟,随后每天两次每次输注20 mg时,通过不良事件和临床实验室指标监测发现耐受性良好。然而,基于药代动力学数据,建议严重肝功能损害患者将考尼伐坦剂量减半。