Back to Search Start Over

General clinical and methodological considerations on the extrapolation of pharmacokinetics and optimization of study protocols for small molecules and monoclonal antibodies in children.

Authors :
Bouazza, Naïm
Dokoumetzidis, Aristides
Knibbe, Catherijne A. J.
de Wildt, Saskia N.
Ambery, Claire
De Cock, Pieter A.
Gasthuys, Elke
Foissac, Frantz
Urien, Saïk
Hamberg, Anna‐Karin
Poggesi, Italo
Zhao, Wei
Vermeulen, An
Standing, Joseph F.
Tréluyer, Jean‐Marc
Source :
British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology; Dec2022, Vol. 88 Issue 12, p4985-4996, 12p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Pharmacometric modelling plays a key role in both the design and analysis of regulatory trials in paediatric drug development. Studies in adults provide a rich source of data to inform the paediatric investigation plans, including knowledge on drug pharmacokinetics (PK), safety and efficacy. In children, drug disposition differs widely from birth to adolescence but extrapolating adult to paediatric PK, safety and efficacy either with pharmacometric or physiologically based approaches can help design or in some cases reduce the need for clinical studies. Aspects to consider when extrapolating PK include the maturation of drug metabolizing enzyme expression, glomerular filtration, drug excretory systems, and the expression and activity of specific transporters in conjunction with other drug properties such as fraction unbound. Knowledge of these can be used to develop extrapolation tools such as allometric scaling plus maturation functions or physiologically based PK. PK/pharmacodynamic approaches and well‐designed clinical trials in children are of key importance in paediatric drug development. In this white paper, state‐of‐the‐art of current methods used for paediatric extrapolation will be discussed. This paper is part of a conect4children implementation of innovative methodologies including pharmacometric and physiologically based PK modelling in clinical trial design/paediatric drug development through dissemination of expertise and expert advice. The suggestions arising from this white paper should define a minimum set of standards in paediatric modelling and contribute to the regulatory science. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03065251
Volume :
88
Issue :
12
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
160233230
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/bcp.15571