Role of biomarkers in drug development - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 43
About This Presentation
Title:

Role of biomarkers in drug development

Description:

... FDA. 4 ... Bhattaram, FDA. 12. PD Driven Dosing Regimen. Regeneration of aromatase is ... Bhattaram, FDA. 14. Value to Drug Development. Offset of E2 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1166
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 44
Provided by: jogago
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Role of biomarkers in drug development


1
Role of biomarkers in drug development
  • Venkatesh Atul Bhattaram
  • Pharmacometrics
  • Office of Clinical Pharmacology and
    Biopharmaceutics,
  • CDER/FDA

My remarks today do not necessarily reflect the
official views of FDA.
2
Types of BiomarkersBased on Pathophysiology
  • Biochemical
  • in vivo
  • PK, BMD, CD4,SGPT Estradiol, Cholesterol
  • ex vivo
  • ACE, AChE activity
  • Anatomical / Morphological
  • Tumor Size, Artery Diameter, Results of PET,
    CT-Scan, MRI
  • Histological
  • Biopsy, WBC
  • Symptoms/Signs/ Others
  • BP, PCWP, Exercise HR, Hospitalization, Rescue
    Medication, Pain Relief, QT, HEM/CYT Response
    rate, Genetic status

3
Types of Indications
  • Symptom / Sign Benefit
  • pain relief, angina relief, BP lowering, improved
    cognition
  • Morbidity / Mortality Benefit
  • Reverse Disease
  • Tx of pediatric leukemia
  • Retard Disease
  • Tx of CHF, Some cancers, Reno-, Cardio-protection

4
Objectives
  • Biomarkers can be effectively used to improve
    dose/regimen selection
  • dose range for symptom/sign related indications
    (Exp-Resp in pivotal trials)
  • dose(s) for mortality/morbidity indications
  • Value of biomarkers is enhanced for drugs with
    approved indications
  • new target populations, new dosing regimens, new
    routes of delivery

Jadhav et al. Amer.Pharm.Rev. 2004
5
Case Studies
6
Initial Dosing Regimen Selection
  • Case Study Aromatase Inhibitors
  • chemoprevention of breast cancer
  • Mortality/Morbidity benefit
  • biomarker driven dose/regimen probably more
    rational (than PK)
  • Case Study ACE / A2 Inhibitors
  • anti-hypertensives
  • Symptom/Sign benefit
  • select dose range based on ex-vivo activity

7
Pathway of E2 formation
Kelloff GJ, et al. Aromatase inhibitors as
potential cancer chemopreventives. Cancer
Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 1998 Jan 7(1)65-78).
8
Pharmacokinetics
Duan Gobburu, 2001
9
PK Driven Dosing Regimen
  • Terminal half-life is about 1 day
  • Dosing frequency every t1/2
  • Kinetics of pharmacologic response not considered

10
Irreversible Physiologic PD Model
Estradiol (E2)
kf,E2
kdeg,E2
Aromatase (AR)
kf,AR
kdeg,AR
kbin? Cp
Duan Gobburu, 2001
11
Effects on Estradiol (E2)
Duan Gobburu, 2001
12
PD Driven Dosing Regimen
  • Terminal half-life is about 1 day
  • Dosing frequency every t1/2
  • Kinetics of pharmacologic response not considered
  • Regeneration of aromatase is the rate-limiting
    step
  • Estradiol reaches baseline levels in about 20
    days (not in 1day)

13
Optimizing Dosing Regimen
1 mg 2.5mg 5 mg 10 mg 25 mg 50 mg
qd
1 mg 2.5mg 5 mg 10 mg 25 mg 50 mg
E2 Level (nmol/mL)
q 48h
1 mg 2.5mg 5 mg 10 mg 25 mg 50 mg
q 72h
Duan Gobburu, 2001
14
Value to Drug Development
  • Offset of E2 suppression critical, not PK
  • Relationship between the clinical outcome and E2
    levels has not been explored
  • Supra-optimal E2 suppression could lead to
    undesired skeletal events
  • Undesired toxicity can be avoided by optimal
    dosing regimen
  • Biomarker model helps in dose selection

Duan Gobburu, 2001
15
Initial Dosing Regimen Selection
  • Case Study Aromatase Inhibitors
  • chemoprevention of breast cancer
  • Mortality/Morbidity benefit
  • biomarker suggested dose/regimen probably more
    rational (than PK)
  • Case Study ACE / A2 Inhibitors
  • anti-hypertensives
  • Symptom/Sign benefit
  • select dose range based on ex-vivo activity

16
ACE / A2 Inhibitors
  • Ex vivo activity is used to select a dose range
    to conduct pivotal trials
  • BP reduction increases beyond maximal ex vivo
    activity
  • Pivotal trials almost always are dose ranging,
    have been the basis for approval

17
ACE / A2 Inhibitors
Dose, mg
Gobburu Lipicky, 2003
18
Value to Drug Development
  • Ex vivo activity clearly aids in avoiding too
    low, high doses
  • Reasonable estimate of the step size between
    doses obtained
  • Also, provides proof-of-concept

19
Case Studies
?
20
Target Population
  • Case Study Herceptin (Trastuzumab)
  • a recombinant DNA-derived humanized monoclonal
    antibody that selectively binds to HER2.
  • Treatment of patients with metastatic breast
    cancer
  • Patients whose tumors over-express HER2 protein
    (3 score) benefit

21
Herceptin TTP
Anthracycline Taxol
22
Herceptin TTP
Anthracycline Taxol
23
Herceptin Cardiotoxicity
Anthracycline Taxol
24
Herceptin
  • Considerable cardio-toxicity exists (28)
  • Patients with HER2 over-expression seem to
    benefit more
  • Benefit/Risk different for 2 and 3
  • Prospective target population identification is
    clearly important
  • Identifying responders may improve dose-response
    (benefit/risk) relationship

25
6-Mercaptopurin
  • Over 50 years of use
  • Patients with inherited deficiency of TPMT
    (thiopurine methyltransferase)
  • high accumulation of intra-cellular thioguanine
    nucleotides
  • prone to myelosuppression
  • substantial dosage reductions needed

26
6-MP and TPMT
Relling et al JNCI, 1999
27
Value to Drug Development
  • Prospective identification of patients with low
    TPMT activity is beneficial
  • avoid undesired toxicity
  • Prospective testing of effective doses in such
    patients
  • Could minimize number of dropouts in clinical
    trials due to toxicity

28
Case Studies
?
29
New Population (Sotalol in Pediatrics)
  • Section 505 A, FDAMA
  • Sotalol approved in adults for VT,SVT
  • mortality/morbidity benefit
  • Studies using Biomarkers (QTc, HR)
  • available in peds and adults (original)
  • Population neonates to 12 yr
  • Model-dependent analysis performed
  • Is PKPD in peds predictable from adults ?
  • Any dosage adjustments ?

30
PK in Pediatrics
Shi J et al JPKPD, 2001
31
Effect on QTc Pediatrics
Shi J et al JPKPD, 2001
32
Effect on QTc Adults
Peds 8 Adults 7.5
33
Effect on HR Pediatrics Adults
Adults EC50 804 ug/L
Peds EC50 790 ug/L
34
Value to Drug Development
  • PKPD in peds predictable from adults
  • assessed using biomarkers
  • Led to dosing recommendations in peds
  • Regulatory buy-in of model dependent analysis
  • Less burden to the sponsor to show similar
    benefit in pediatrics as in adults

35
Case Studies
?
36
Metoprolol XL
  • IR dosing b.i.d.
  • XL dosing q.d. (convenient dosing)
  • Immediate release (IR) approved for treating
    angina, hypertension in adults
  • easily demonstrable, titratable effects
  • directly related to beta-blockade
  • IR also approved for prevention of MI, death
    (mortality/morbidity benefit)
  • not solely related to beta-blockade
  • not titratable

37
Metoprolol XL Angina
  • New drug application (IR)
  • Two trials in angina patients
  • ITT analysis
  • New formulation (XL)
  • One trial with healthy patients
  • Concentration-HR relationship

38
Metoprolol and Attentuation of Exercise HR IR, XL
Abrahamsson et al, CPT
39
Value to Drug Development
  • Knowledge from IR used as prior
  • Beta blockade demonstrated with a simple trial in
    healthy subjects
  • Concentration-?HR compared between IR and XL
  • particularly the duration of effect
  • used to project effects in angina patients
  • Less burden to the sponsor to show similar
    outcome between XL and IR

40
Biomarkers in Drug Development
  • Biomarkers can be effectively used to improve
    dose/regimen selection
  • dose range for symptom/sign related indications
    (DR in pivotal trials)
  • dose(s) for mortality/morbidity indications
  • Value of biomarkers is enhanced for drugs with
    approved indications
  • new target populations, new dosing regimens, new
    routes of delivery

41
References
  • Jadhav, Mehta, Gobburu. How biomarkers can
    improve clinical drug develoment.
    Amer.Pharm.Rev., 7(3), 62-64, 2004.
  • Lesko et al. Use of biomarkers from drug
    discovery through clinical practice Report of
    the Ninth European Federation of Pharmaceutical
    Sciences Conference on Optimizing Drug
    Development. Clin.Pharmacol.Ther.,73284-291,
    2003.
  • Temple RJ. Are surrogate markers adequate to
    assess cardiovascular disease drugs?
    JAMA,282(8)790-793, 1999.
  • Guidance for Industry. Exposure-response
    relationships-study design, data analysis and
    regulatory applications
  • Peck, Rubin, Sheiner. Hypothesis A single
    clinical trial plus causal evidence of
    effectiveness is sufficient for drug approval.
    Clin.Pharmacol.Ther. 73481-490, 2003.
  • Colburn WA. Optimizing the use of biomarkers,
    surrogate endpoints and clinical endpoints for
    more efficient drug development.
    J.Clin.Pharmacol.401419-1427, 2000.
  • ICH E5 and Pediatric drug development.

42
Acknowledgements
  • Dr Joga Gobburu
  • Dr Patrick Marroum
  • Dr. Mehul Desai, DCRDP

43
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com