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Jie Ling,
Sally Lyn,
Zhenhua Xu,
Meguru Achira,
Esther Bouman-Thio,
Akira Shishido, Joyce Ford,
Gopi Shankar,
Carrie Wagner,
Kenneth T Kim,
Hugh M Davis,
Honghui Zhou
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ABSTRACT: This phase 1 study evaluated the single-dose pharmacokinetics and safety of subcutaneous golimumab, a human anti-tumor necrosis factor-alpha monoclonal antibody, in healthy Japanese and Caucasian subjects. Eligible subjects were males, aged 20 to 45 years, weighing 50 to 90 kg with a body mass index of 19 to 30 kg/m(2). Japanese and Caucasian subjects were matched by body weight and dose group. Blood samples were collected through day 50 following a single subcutaneous injection of golimumab 50 or 100 mg. The pharmacokinetic parameters were determined using a noncompartmental method. All 51 subjects (24 Japanese, 27 Caucasian) were included in the safety analysis; 47 completed the study and were included in the pharmacokinetic analysis. The pharmacokinetics of golimumab were comparable in both race groups. Peak concentrations were observed approximately 4 to 6 days after administration. No significant differences in exposure or mean half-life (range, 11-13 days) were observed between Japanese and Caucasian subjects at the same dose level. Regardless of race, serum golimumab exposure increased with increasing dose. Mean apparent clearance ranged from 12 to 19 mL/kg/d. Mean apparent volume of distribution (224-262 mL/kg) remained constant with an increase in dose. No antibodies to golimumab were detected. Single subcutaneous injections of golimumab 50 mg or 100 mg were generally well tolerated in these healthy male Japanese and Caucasian subjects.
The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology 07/2010; 50(7):792-802. · 2.91 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Infliximab, a monoclonal antibody, is approved for the treatment of inflammatory diseases at doses that depend on the patient disease population. It was the aim of this study to evaluate its population pharmacokinetics in patients with moderately to severely active ulcerative colitis and characterize patient covariates that affect its disposition in this population.
Information collected from 482 patients in two randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled international studies were analyzed using NONMEM.
A two-compartment, population pharmacokinetic model described the serum infliximab concentration-time data. Population pharmacokinetic estimates (typical value +/- standard error), based on the final covariate model, were clearance (CL: 0.407 +/- 0.0103 L/day), apparent volumes of distribution in the central (V(1): 3.29 +/- 0.0679 L) and peripheral (V(2): 4.13 +/- 0.16 L) compartments, and intercompartment clearance (Q: 7.14 +/- 0.489 L/day). Infliximab exhibited interindividual variability for CL and V(1) of 37.7% and 22.1%, respectively. Infliximab t(1/2) is approximately 14 days. Covariate analysis showed that V(1) increased as body weight increased, and CL was higher in patients who developed antibodies to infliximab. An additional novel covariate, serum albumin concentration, was found to be inversely and strongly related to infliximab clearance in this population.
The disposition of infliximab in patients with moderately to severely active ulcerative colitis, unlike in rheumatoid arthritis, was not affected by coadministration of immunomodulators and corticosteroids but was related to formation of antibodies to infliximab and, notably, to serum albumin levels.
European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology 09/2009; 65(12):1211-28. · 2.85 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The objective of this study was to determine whether infliximab, an antitumor necrosis factor monoclonal antibody, is transferred in utero or through breast milk from nursing Crohn's disease patients to their newborns.
Crohn's disease most often occurs in women of childbearing age. Many of these women receive treatment for their disease, but are advised to terminate therapy while pregnant or nursing.
Three patients diagnosed with Crohn's disease who had a history of infliximab use during and after pregnancy were followed prospectively. Patients received 5-mg/kg infliximab at regular intervals until approximately gestational week 30, and resumed infliximab treatment within 3 to 14 days after giving birth. Serum samples from patients and children and breast milk samples were collected postpartum. The concentration of infliximab in the serum and milk samples was measured using an enzyme-linked immmunosorbent assay.
The levels of infliximab detected in the mothers' serum samples postpartum were 74.27, 62.62, and 59.97 microg/mL, respectively. However, infliximab was undetectable (<0.10 microg/mL) in the sera of the newborn children. Likewise, infliximab was undetectable in the breast milk of the nursing mothers.
Infliximab was detected in the mothers' sera, but not in the breast milk of nursing mothers or in the sera of the breast-fed newborns. Data from this small series of patients suggest that infliximab was not transferred from mother to child, either in utero or through breast milk. These data suggest that mothers receiving infliximab should not be discouraged from nursing their children.
Journal of clinical gastroenterology 02/2009; 43(7):613-6. · 2.21 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The population pharmacokinetics of infliximab were characterized in patients with active ankylosing spondylitis (n = 274). Serum infliximab concentration data, from a 2-year period, were analyzed using NONMEM. A 2-compartment linear pharmacokinetic model was chosen to describe the pharmacokinetic characteristics of infliximab in serum. Population estimates (typical value +/- standard error) were obtained from the final covariate model: clearance (CL: 0.273 +/- 0.007 L/day), volume of distribution in the central compartment (V(1): 3.06 +/- 0.057 L), intercompartment clearance (Q: 1.72 +/- 0.48 L/day), and volume of distribution in the peripheral compartment (V(2): 2.94 +/- 0.17 L). Interindividual variability for CL and V(1) was 34.1% and 17.5%, respectively. White blood cell count at baseline and the antibody-to-infliximab status were significant covariates to CL; body surface area and sex were significant covariates to V(1). The CL for patients with a positive antibody-to-infliximab status was estimated to be 41.9% to 76.7% higher than for the remaining patients. Other covariates (baseline disease activity and the concomitant medication use of prednisolone, omeprazole, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, or analgesics) did not affect infliximab pharmacokinetics. The development of antibodies to infliximab was associated with accelerated infliximab clearance and may represent a potential underlying mechanism for an inadequate response, or loss of response, to infliximab treatment.
The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology 07/2008; 48(6):681-95. · 2.91 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Weight loss predicts a poor prognosis for patients with non-small-cell lung cancer. Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) is a mediator of this weight loss, yet no studies have tested infliximab, an IgG monoclonal antibody that blocks the binding of TNFalpha to its p55 and p75 receptors, for this indication. The safety and pharmacokinetics of infliximab in combination with docetaxel, a commonly used chemotherapy agent for non-small-cell lung cancer, were explored in this pilot study.
Four patients with metastatic non-small-cell lung cancer were treated initially with infliximab 5 mg/kg per day intravenously once a week on weeks 1, 3 and 5, and docetaxel 36 mg/m2 per day intravenously once a week on weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 of an 8-week treatment cycle. Therapy was well tolerated with no grade 4 or 5 adverse events. Maximal serum concentrations of infliximab at 1, 3 and 5 weeks were (mean+/-SD) 108+/-11, 135+/-19, and 139+/-6 microg/ml, respectively, and appeared similar to historical concentrations from non-cancer patients not receiving concomitant chemotherapy (144+/-68 microg/ml). One patient manifested weight stability. One patient manifested a partial tumor response, one stable disease, and two disease progression. Median survival within the cohort was 203 days (range 111 to 324 days).
The above combination appears safe, and docetaxel does not appear to increase serum concentrations of infliximab. A larger study testing the role of this combination for weight loss in non-small-cell lung cancer patients is ongoing and utilizes the doses described above.
Supportive Care Cancer 01/2005; 12(12):859-63. · 2.60 Impact Factor