Role of Quantitative Clinical Pharmacology in Pediatric Approval and Labeling

被引:57
|
作者
Mehrotra, Nitin [1 ]
Bhattaram, Atul [1 ]
Earp, Justin C. [1 ]
Florian, Jeffry [1 ]
Krudys, Kevin [1 ]
Lee, Jee Eun [1 ]
Lee, Joo Yeon [2 ]
Liu, Jiang [1 ]
Mulugeta, Yeruk [1 ]
Yu, Jingyu [1 ]
Zhao, Ping [1 ]
Sinha, Vikram [1 ]
机构
[1] US FDA, Div Pharmacometr, Off Clin Pharmacol, Off Translat Sci,Ctr Drug Evaluat & Res, 10903 New Hampshire Ave,White Oak Bldg 51,Rm 3199, Silver Spring, MD 20993 USA
[2] US FDA, Div Biometr 7, Off Biostat, Off Translat Sci,Ctr Drug Evaluat & Res, Silver Spring, MD USA
关键词
ADVERSE DRUG-REACTIONS; PHARMACOKINETIC PBPK; REGULATORY SCIENCE; SIMULATION; IMPACT; PHARMACOMETRICS; DECISIONS; MODEL; PREDICTION; WORKSHOP;
D O I
10.1124/dmd.116.069559
中图分类号
R9 [药学];
学科分类号
1007 ;
摘要
Dose selection is one of the key decisions made during drug development in pediatrics. There are regulatory initiatives that promote the use of model-based drug development in pediatrics. Pharmacometrics or quantitative clinical pharmacology enables development of models that can describe factors affecting pharmacokinetics and/or pharmacodynamics in pediatric patients. This manuscript describes some examples in which pharmacometric analysis was used to support approval and labeling in pediatrics. In particular, the role of pharmacokinetic (PK) comparison of pediatric PK to adults and utilization of dose/exposure-response analysis for dose selection are highlighted. Dose selection for esomeprazole in pediatrics was based on PK matching to adults, whereas for adalimumab, exposure-response, PK, efficacy, and safety data together were useful to recommend doses for pediatric Crohn's disease. For vigabatrin, demonstration of similar dose-response between pediatrics and adults allowed for selection of a pediatric dose. Based on model-based pharmacokinetic simulations and safety data from darunavir pediatric clinical studies with a twice-daily regimen, different once-daily dosing regimens for treatment-naive human immunodeficiency virus 1-infected pediatric subjects 3 to <12 years of age were evaluated. The role of physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling (PBPK) in predicting pediatric PK is rapidly evolving. However, regulatory review experiences and an understanding of the state of science indicate that there is a lack of established predictive performance of PBPK in pediatric PK prediction. Moving forward, pharmacometrics will continue to play a key role in pediatric drug development contributing toward decisions pertaining to dose selection, trial designs, and assessing disease similarity to adults to support extrapolation of efficacy.
引用
收藏
页码:924 / 933
页数:10
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