Obese subjects may require a higher fixed oral maintenance dosing regimen of voriconazole compared to normal weight subjects to achieve comparable plasma exposures. The current study is designed to address this issue.
The prevalence of obesity has increased tremendously in the past two decades. An estimated 1 out of 5 persons in the United States are classified as obese. Under representation of obese patients in pharmacokinetic trials grossly limit generalizability of drug dosing recommendations in this emerging population. No published pharmacokinetic studies of voriconazole dosing in patients with obesity currently exist in the literature. Specifically,voriconazole pharmacokinetic data from subjects with a body mass index (BMI) ≥ 35 kg/m2(Class II and III obesity) are limited. Voriconazole is available as both an intravenous and oral formulation. Anecdotal experience suggest that the use of oral voriconazole to be significantly more prevalent that that of intravenous therapy. The current oral recommended dosing regimen for voriconazole includes use of 200 mg every 12 hours for patients who are over 40 kg. The dosage can be increased to 300 mg by mouth every 12 hours in situations where a sufficient clinical response is not noted. A weight based dosing strategy is also utilized in patients with more serious infections (3-6 mg/kg IV Q 12 hours) such as invasive aspergillosis. Voriconazole demonstrates non-linear pharmacokinetics and so dosing based on total body weight may result in non-dose proportional exposure. For example, a 1.5 fold dose increment in voriconazole from 200 mg to 300 mg every 12 hours results in a 2.5 fold increase in exposure. The most appropriate body size descriptor is unknown (i.e. ideal body weight, fat free weight, lean body weight, etc.) for most antimicrobials, including voriconazole. As a consequence, the appropriateness of weight-based voriconazole dosage selection in obese patients is not known. Intuitively, weight based dosing (on total body weight) in this population could lead to higher than expected exposures (non-linear pharmacokinetics) and lead to potential adverse events. Therapeutic drug monitoring is increasingly advocated as a system to improve voriconazole dosing. However, an assay to measure voriconazole concentrations in the clinic is not routinely available. Hence, the current pilot study proposes to characterize the pharmacokinetic profile of voriconazole in obese subjects using two fixed dose regimens.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
10
Voriconazole 400 mg po x 2 doses (loading dose)then 200 mg po twice daily x 7 doses
Voriconazole 400 mg po x 2 doses (loading dose)then 300 mg po twice daily x 7 doses
TKL Research Inc
Paramus, New Jersey, United States
Steady-State Cmax and Cmin of Two Voriconazole Dosing Regimens
Cmax is the maximum concentration, and Cmin is the minimum concentration. These measurements are based on analysis of plasma. The units shown are milligrams of voriconazole per liter of plasma. The two dosing regimens are: 1. a loading dose (400 mg x 2 doses, day 1) and maintenance doses (200 mg every 12 hours x 7 doses) in obese subjects. 2. a loading dose (400 mg x 2 doses, day 1) and maintenance doses (300 mg every 12 hours x 7 doses) in obese subjects.
Time frame: Day 5
Geometric Mean Ratio of the AUC Between the High and Low Dose Voriconazole
AUC is the area under the concentration-time curve. The Geometric Mean Ratio and 90% confidence interval around this value permit an assessment of the bioequivalence of two dosing regimens in the same group. The geometric mean is computed based on the ratio of the AUC value from the high dose compared to the AUC value from the low dose for each individual. This ratio provides a more robust interpretation of the differences between the two dosing arms because each individual serves as their own control.
Time frame: 14 days
The Area Under the Curve Over the Dosing Interval for All Participants While on the High Dose and Low Dose Interventions.
Time frame: 12 hours
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