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Challenges of Pharmacokinetic/Pharmacodynamic Assessments in Pediatric Oncology

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Title: Challenges of Pharmacokinetic/Pharmacodynamic Assessments in Pediatric Oncology


1
Challenges of Pharmacokinetic/Pharmacodynamic
Assessments in Pediatric Oncology
Clinton F. Stewart, Pharm.D. St. Jude Childrens
Research Hospital Memphis, TN
2
Outline
  • Summary of results of early clinical
    pharmacokinetic studies with topoisomerase I
    inhibitors
  • Application of results from nonclinical studies
    of topoisomerase I inhibitors to design of
    clinical trials (Phase Ib/IIa)
  • Summary results of later clinical drug
    development with topoisomerase I inhibitors
    (Phase Ib/Phase IIa)
  • Thoughts regarding design of clinical
    pharmacokinetic studies of targeted drug therapy

3
Pharmacology Studies EnhanceDevelopment of
Anticancer Drugs
  • Additional PK/PD (efficacy) studies
  • Evaluate different schedules

Phase IV Clinical Trials
Phase II Clinical Trials
Phase III Clinical Trials
MARKET
  • Evaluate clinical safety of new schedules,
    dosage, or combinations
  • Comparative studiesof efficacy

4
Two Commercially Available Topoisomerase I
Inhibitors For Use In Pediatric
OncologyTopotecan and Irinotecan
5
Initial Clinical Trials with Topoisomerase I
Inhibitors in Children with Cancer
  • Topotecan 72-hour CI in children with recurrent
    solid tumors (Pratt, JCO, 1994)
  • Antitumor activity
  • DLT myelosuppression
  • Preliminary data for LSM
  • Topotecan 120-hour CI in children with recurrent
    leukemia (MTSE) (Furman, JCO, 1996)
  • Antileukemic effect
  • DLT mucositis
  • PK/PD observations

6
Initial Clinical Trials with Topoisomerase I
Inhibitors in Children with Cancer
  • Oral topotecan (15 or 21-days) in children with
    refractory solid tumors (Zamboni, CCP, 1999)
  • Well absorbed
  • Wide interpatient variability but less than
    intrapatient
  • Topotecan CSF penetration studied in children
    with primary brain tumors (Baker, CCP, 1996)
  • Extensive penetration, wide interpatient
    variability, no difference among infusion rates

7
Initial Clinical Trials with Topoisomerase I
Inhibitors in Children with Cancer
  • Topotecan 30-min infusion (dx5) in children with
    recurrent solid tumors (POG-9275 Tubergen,
    Stewart JPHO, 1996)
  • Antitumor activity
  • DLT myelosuppression
  • Validation of LSM
  • Wide interpatient variabilityin clearance with
    small (20) dosage increments, overlap in
    topotecan exposure across dose levels

8
Initial Clinical Trials with Topoisomerase I
Inhibitors in Children with Cancer
  • Irinotecan 60-min infusion (dx5x2) in children
    with recurrent solid tumors (Furman, JCO, 1999)
  • Antitumor activity
  • DLT diarrhea
  • Pharmacokinetics complex with metabolism to
    active (SN-38) and inactive metabolites
  • SN-38 highly protein bound
  • Role for pharmacogenetics

9
Comparison of Results from Adult and Pediatric
Phase I Studies for the Topoisomerase I Inhibitors
  • Pharmacokinetics
  • Topotecan lactone systemic clearance similar
    between adults and children, in early studies
  • Limited pediatric population (ages, drug-drug
    intxn)
  • Pharmacodynamics
  • Relation between TPT lactone systemic exposure
    and decrease ANC similar between two groups
  • MTD
  • Pediatric MTD higher for comparable schedules
    problematic comparison (dx5x2)
  • DLT (no difference)

10
Outline
  • Summary of results of early clinical
    pharmacokinetic studies with topoisomerase I
    inhibitors
  • Application of results from nonclinical studies
    of topoisomerase I inhibitors to design of
    clinical trials (Phase Ib/Iia)
  • Summary results of later clinical drug
    development with topoisomerase I inhibitors
    (Phase Ib/Phase Iia)
  • Thoughts regarding design of clinical
    pharmacokinetic studies of targeted drug therapy

11
Application of Nonclinical PK/PD StudiesEnhance
Anticancer Drug Development
  • Additional PK/PD (efficacy) studies
  • Evaluate different schedules

Phase II Clinical Trials
  • Evaluate clinical safety of new schedules,
    dosage, or combinations

12
Role of Pharmacokinetics in Xenograft Model
Topoisomerase I Inhibitors
13
Summary of Topoisomerase I Antitumor Efficacy
Studies Conducted in the Xenograft Model
  • Schedule-dependent
  • Duration of therapy critical
  • Administration interval important
  • Protracted dosing schedule associated with
    antitumor activity
  • Dose-dependent
  • Self-limiting antitumor activity at high doses
  • Critical threshold drug exposure for antitumor
    activity
  • Clinical dosing schedule low-dose, protracted
    (dx5x2)

14
Use of the Nonhuman Primate Model
Topotecan in CNS Malignancies
  • To evaluate effect of TPT infusion rate on TPT
    CSF concentration throughout the neuraxis
    (ventricular lumbar)
  • To generate a PK model to describe plasma and CSF
    TPT disposition, which could be used to design
    clinical trials of TPT to treat CNS tumors

15
Outline
  • Summary of results of early clinical
    pharmacokinetic studies with topoisomerase I
    inhibitors
  • Application of results from nonclinical studies
    of topoisomerase I inhibitors to design of
    clinical trials (Phase Ib/Iia)
  • Summary results of later clinical drug
    development with topoisomerase I inhibitors
    (Phase Ib/Phase Iia)
  • Thoughts regarding design of clinical
    pharmacokinetic studies of targeted drug therapy

16
Rationale for Pharmacokinetically Guided Dosing
of Anticancer Drugs
  • Considerations for this relationship
  • Preclinical models
  • Clinical studies
  • Drug sensitive tumor
  • Systemic-intensity not same as dose intensity
  • Medication errors
  • Patient tolerance
  • Patient compliance

Dose intensity
Clinical Response
Systemic Exposure
17
Rationale for Pharmacokinetically Guided Dosing
in Children with Cancer
  • Pharmacokinetic variability
  • Drug absorption, distribution, metabolism,
    elimination
  • Inter-patient variability greater than
    intrapatient
  • Other sources of variability
  • Maturational changes
  • Renal hepatic impairment
  • Inherited difference in drug metabolism
    disposition
  • Drug-drug intxns

18
Selected Criteria for Pharmacokinetically Guided
Dosing
  • General considerations
  • Narrow therapeutic index
  • Drug effect delayed
  • Relation between drug effect drug exposure
  • Logistical considerations
  • Drug regimen amenable to dosage adjustment (e.g.,
    gt 24 hr CI, gt 1 d regimen dx5x2, etc.)
  • Assay method available
  • Pharmacokinetic considerations
  • Well-characterized pharmacokinetics (PK model)
  • Population priors for available for Bayesian
    analysis
  • Limited sampling model

19
Application of Pharmacokinetic Studies to
Optimize Topotecan Therapy Design Considerations
  • Selection of initial systemic exposure and dose
  • Pharmacokinetic metric to express drug exposure

20
Topotecan Dosage Adjustment Schema TOPO5x2
PK Studies
Adjust Dose
  • Topotecan i.v. over 30 minutes daily x 5 for two
    consecutive weeks
  • Target topotecan systemic exposure 100 20
    ng/ml-hr

21
Lessons Learned from Pharmacokinetically Guided
Topotecan Clinical Trials
  • Phase I Feasibility Study (TOPO5x2)
  • Antitumor activity noted
  • Achieve target systemic exposure and reduce
    interpatient variability in topotecan exposure
  • Pharmacokinetically guided TPT in combination
    with vincristine (Phase I)
  • Some antitumor responses
  • However, significant myelosuppression (platelets)
  • Used lower topotecan target (80 10 ng/mL)
  • Pharmacokinetically guided TPT in combination
    with CTX (Phase I)
  • Used as a conditioning regimen followed by AHSCT
  • Toxicities manageable
  • 90 patients were within target

22
Lessons Learned from Pharmacokinetically Guided
Topotecan Clinical Trials
  • PK guided TPT dosing upfront window therapy
    (Phase II) in children with high-risk
    neuroblastoma (SJNB97)
  • No progressive disease noted (gt 50 PR)
  • Achieve target exposure (gt90) ? interpt var.
    TPT AUC
  • Studied 10 infants (lt 2 yr), noted TPT lactone
    systemic clearance significantly lt than in other
    pts (12 vs 21 L/hr)
  • PK guided TPT dosing upfront window therapy
    (Phase II) in children with high-risk
    medulloblastoma (drug exposure in a minor
    exposure compartment, i.e., CSF)
  • Significant antitumor response (target
    plasmatarget CSF)
  • Manageable toxicities
  • Drug-drug interactions
  • Enzyme-inducing anticonvulsants (DPH) increase
    TPT clr
  • Dexamethasone increases TPT clr

23
Outline
  • Summary of results of early clinical
    pharmacokinetic studies with topoisomerase I
    inhibitors
  • Application of results from nonclinical studies
    of topoisomerase I inhibitors to design of
    clinical trials (Phase Ib/Iia)
  • Summary results of later clinical drug
    development with topoisomerase I inhibitors
    (Phase Ib/Phase Iia)
  • Thoughts regarding design of clinical
    pharmacokinetic studies of targeted drug therapy

24
Design Issues for Molecular Target-Based
Anticancer Drugs in Children
  • Definition of target
  • Expression of protein in vivo
  • Expression of protein and data from in vitro
    studies
  • Expression of protein, data from in vitro
    studies, and prognostic significance
  • Emphasizes the need for a relevant model in
    which to evaluate the target
  • In vitro, xenograft, transgenic
  • Requires a complete understanding of pathway(s)
  • Pharmacologic metric (as with PK guided dosing)
  • IC50 vs AUC vs some other measure of drug
    exposure
  • Important to consider that pediatric tumors
    likely have different biological pathways and
    therefore targets

25
Challenges in Pharmacokinetic/Pharmacodynamic
Assessments in Pediatric Oncology
  • Havent really talked a lot about challenges
    per se because
  • Resources and infrastructure of St. Jude have
    made these studies possible
  • Also, the infrastructure present in the DT
    Committee, COG
  • Challenge for the future to apply what we have
    learned to Phase IIb/III clinical trials of
    topotecan used in combination
  • COG study of topotecan in combination with CTX in
    NB
  • How to dose topotecan?
  • Topotecan population pharmacokinetic study, where
    weve found that covariates for TPT clearance
    included BSA, concomitant phenytoin therapy,
    serum creatinine, and age
  • PK studies provide insight into differences in
    drug disposition (phenotype) which can then be
    explained in many cases by genetic variations in
    drug metabolism or transport (genotype)
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