Evaluation of drug-induced QT interval prolongation in animal and human studies: a literature review of concordance

被引:39
作者
Vargas, Hugo M. [1 ]
Bass, Alan S. [2 ]
Koerner, John [3 ]
Matis-Mitchell, Sherri [4 ]
Pugsley, Michael K. [5 ]
Skinner, Matthew [6 ]
Burnham, Matthew [6 ]
Bridgland-Taylor, Matthew [6 ]
Pettit, Syril [7 ]
Valentin, Jean-Pierre [6 ]
机构
[1] Amgen Inc, Integrated Discovery & Safety Pharmacol, Thousand Oaks, CA 91320 USA
[2] Merck Res Labs, Safety Assessment, Boston, MA USA
[3] US FDA, Ctr Drug Evaluat & Res, Silver Spring, MD USA
[4] AstraZeneca R&D, Discovery Informat, Wilmington, DE USA
[5] Janssen R&D, Safety & Exploratory Pharmacol, Raritan, NJ USA
[6] AstraZeneca R&D, Safety Assessment, Macclesfield, Cheshire, England
[7] Hlth & Environm Sci Inst, Washington, DC USA
关键词
TORSADES-DE-POINTES; NONCLINICAL MODELS; SAFETY EVALUATION; PREDICTIVE-VALUE; CONSCIOUS DOG; HEART-RATE; IN-VITRO; REPOLARIZATION; PHARMACOLOGY; PRODACT;
D O I
10.1111/bph.13207
中图分类号
R9 [药学];
学科分类号
1007 ;
摘要
Evaluating whether a new medication prolongs QT intervals is a critical safety activity that is conducted in a sensitive animal model during non-clinical drug development. The importance of QT liability detection has been reinforced by non-clinical [International Conference on Harmonization (ICH) S7B] and clinical (ICH E14) regulatory guidance from the International Conference on Harmonization. A key challenge for the cardiovascular safety community is to understand how the finding from a non-clinical in vivoQT assay in animals predicts the outcomes of a clinical QT evaluation in humans. The Health and Environmental Sciences Institute Pro-Arrhythmia Working Group performed a literature search (1960-2011) to identify both human and non-rodent animal studies that assessed QT signal concordance between species and identified drugs that prolonged or did not prolong the QT interval. The main finding was the excellent agreement between QT results in humans and non-rodent animals. Ninety-one percent (21 of 23) of drugs that prolonged the QT interval in humans also did so in animals, and 88% (15 of 17) of drugs that did not prolong the QT interval in humans had no effect on animals. This suggests that QT interval data derived from relevant non-rodent models has a 90% chance of predicting QT findings in humans. Disagreement can occur, but in the limited cases of QT discordance we identified, there appeared to be plausible explanations for the underlying disconnect between the human and non-rodent animal QT outcomes.
引用
收藏
页码:4002 / 4011
页数:10
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