Dunlap Tyler C, Gonzalez Daniel, Kyler Kathryn E, Helfer Victória Etges, Williams Veronica, Friesen Chance S, Artz Nathan, Chan Sherwin, Shakhnovich Valentina
Division of Pharmacotherapy and Experimental Therapeutics, UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Department of Medicine, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, USA.
J Clin Pharmacol. 2024 Aug 27. doi: 10.1002/jcph.6122.
Pediatric obesity is a growing health concern, affecting millions of children worldwide. While pharmacokinetic (PK) changes in numerous commonly prescribed medications have been linked to obesity, the physiological mechanisms driving these alterations and their implications for drug dosing remain poorly understood. The objective of this study was to evaluate previously reported observations of reduced pantoprazole clearance (CL) in children with obesity, investigate obesity-related characteristics in liver physiology as explanatory causes for these observations, and evaluate the clinical relevance of obesity on drug dosing. A prospective, comparative PK study, enrolling participants 6-21 years of age, with and without obesity, was conducted to evaluate the association between obesity-related characteristics and pantoprazole CL. A nonlinear mixed-effects modeling approach was used to identify sources of interindividual variability in pantoprazole PK. Monte Carlo simulations were performed to assess pantoprazole exposure in children and evaluate the association between obesity and pantoprazole exposure. The study population consisted of 39 pediatric participants: 31% without obesity and 69% with obesity. A two-compartment PK model with covariate effects of total body weight (TBW), CYP2C19 metabolizer phenotype, and obesity status adequately described the PK data. After accounting for differences due to TBW and CYP2C19 metabolizer phenotype, obesity was associated with an estimated 18% reduction in pantoprazole CL (comparable to the reduction estimated for a CYP2C19 loss of function allele). Further research is warranted to evaluate the physiological mechanisms associated with reduced drug CL in children with increased body size and the implications for drug dosing.
儿童肥胖是一个日益严重的健康问题,影响着全球数百万儿童。虽然许多常用处方药的药代动力学(PK)变化与肥胖有关,但导致这些改变的生理机制及其对药物剂量的影响仍知之甚少。本研究的目的是评估先前报道的肥胖儿童泮托拉唑清除率(CL)降低的观察结果,调查肝脏生理学中与肥胖相关的特征作为这些观察结果的解释性原因,并评估肥胖对药物剂量的临床相关性。进行了一项前瞻性、比较性PK研究,招募6至21岁、有或无肥胖的参与者,以评估与肥胖相关的特征与泮托拉唑CL之间的关联。采用非线性混合效应建模方法来识别泮托拉唑PK个体间变异性的来源。进行蒙特卡罗模拟以评估儿童泮托拉唑的暴露情况,并评估肥胖与泮托拉唑暴露之间的关联。研究人群包括39名儿科参与者:31%无肥胖,69%有肥胖。一个具有总体重(TBW)、CYP2C19代谢酶表型和肥胖状态协变量效应的二室PK模型充分描述了PK数据。在考虑了TBW和CYP2C19代谢酶表型的差异后,肥胖与泮托拉唑CL估计降低18%相关(与CYP2C19功能缺失等位基因估计的降低相当)。有必要进行进一步的研究,以评估与体型增加的儿童药物CL降低相关的生理机制及其对药物剂量的影响。