Back to Search Start Over

Bridging Fixed Dose to Body Weight-based Regimen of Adalimumab in Paediatric Ulcerative Colitis Using a Pharmacometric Modelling Approach: Case Study with the Phase 3 ENVISION I Trial

Authors :
Sven Stodtmann
Mong-Jen Chen
Lucia Siovitz
Mareike Bereswill
Andreas Lazar
Nicholas Croft
Jaroslaw Kierkus
William A Faubion
Nael M Mostafa
Source :
Journal of Crohn'scolitis. 16(10)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background and Aims The Phase 3 study ENVISION I demonstrated efficacy and safety of adalimumab in paediatric patients with moderate to severe ulcerative colitis. The protocol-specified high-dose adalimumab regimen was numerically more efficacious than the standard-dose regimen. The objective of this work was to bridge a fixed-dosing regimen to the protocol-specified high-induction/high-maintenance, body weight-based dosing regimen studied in ENVISION I, using a pharmacometrics modelling and simulation approach. Methods A stepwise strategy was implemented, including developing an adalimumab paediatric population pharmacokinetic model; using this model to determine a fixed-dosing regimen in paediatric ulcerative colitis patients which achieves similar concentrations to those observed in ENVISION I patients; determining adalimumab exposure-response relationship using population pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic model and data from ENVISION I; simulating clinical remission rate in paediatric ulcerative colitis patients using the Markov exposure-response model and the dosing regimen determined to provide similar efficacy to that observed in ENVISION I. Results Both developed population pharmacokinetic and pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic models adequately described the observed data. Adalimumab exposure was identified as a significant predictor of clinical remission at Week 8 based on logistic regression [p Conclusions The population pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic model supports the appropriateness of the use of the fixed-dosing regimen in the paediatric ulcerative colitis population.

Details

ISSN :
18764479
Volume :
16
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Crohn'scolitis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e4bd6c2031b084c479c5cc1dd502f52a