Population pharmacokinetics of tafenoquine during malaria prophylaxis in healthy subjects

Bruce G Charles, Ann K Miller, Peter E Nasveld, Mark G Reid, Ivor E Harris, Michael D Edstein, Bruce G Charles, Ann K Miller, Peter E Nasveld, Mark G Reid, Ivor E Harris, Michael D Edstein

Abstract

The population pharmacokinetics of tafenoquine were studied in Australian soldiers taking tafenoquine for malarial prophylaxis. The subjects (476 males and 14 females) received a loading dose of 200 mg tafenoquine base daily for 3 days, followed by a weekly dose of 200 mg tafenoquine for 6 months. Blood samples were collected from each subject after the last loading dose and then at weeks 4, 8, and 16. Plasma tafenoquine concentrations were determined by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Population modeling was performed with NONMEM, using a one-compartment model. Typical values of the first-order absorption rate constant (K(a)), clearance (CL/F), and volume of distribution (V/F) were 0.243 h(-1), 0.056 liters/h/kg, and 23.7 liters/kg, respectively. The intersubject variability (coefficient of variation) in CL/F and V/F was 18% and 22%, respectively. The interoccasion variability in CL/F was 18%, and the mean elimination half-life was 12.7 days. A positive linear association between weight and both CL/F and V/F was found, but this had insufficient impact to warrant dosage adjustments. Model robustness was assessed by a nonparametric bootstrap (200 samples). A degenerate visual predictive check indicated that the raw data mirrored the postdose concentration-time profiles simulated (n = 1,000) from the final model. Individual pharmacokinetic estimates for tafenoquine did not predict the prophylactic outcome with the drug for four subjects who relapsed with Plasmodium vivax malaria, as they had similar pharmacokinetics to those who were free of malaria infection. No obvious pattern existed between the plasma tafenoquine concentration and the pharmacokinetic parameter values for subjects with and without drug-associated moderate or severe adverse events. This validated population pharmacokinetic model satisfactorily describes the disposition and variability of tafenoquine used for long-term malaria prophylaxis in a large cohort of soldiers on military deployment.

Figures

FIG. 1.
FIG. 1.
Relationship of body weight (WT) to individual estimates of (a) CL/F and (b) V/F for tafenoquine.
FIG. 2.
FIG. 2.
Degenerate visual predictive check of the final population model for tafenoquine. Plots are shown for plasma tafenoquine concentration versus postdose time in sampling windows of (a) week 1 (post-loading dose), (b) week 4, (c) week 8, and (d) week 16. The population-predicted profile (50th percentile) is shown by the solid line, and the 90% prediction intervals estimated from 1,000 simulated concentrations over 200 h (postdose) are encompassed by the broken lines in each plot.

Source: PubMed

3
Subskrybuj