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Simulation-Based Assessment of the Impact of Non-Adherence on Endoxifen Target Attainment in Different Tamoxifen Dosing Strategies

Authors :
Anna Mueller-Schoell
Lena Klopp-Schulze
Robin Michelet
Madelé van Dyk
Thomas E. Mürdter
Matthias Schwab
Markus Joerger
Wilhelm Huisinga
Gerd Mikus
Charlotte Kloft
Source :
Pharmaceuticals, Vol 14, Iss 2, p 115 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2021.

Abstract

Tamoxifen is widely used in breast cancer treatment and minimum steady-state concentrations of its active metabolite endoxifen (CSS,min ENDX) above 5.97 ng/mL have been associated with favourable disease outcome. Yet, about 20% of patients do not reach target CSS,min ENDX applying conventional tamoxifen dosing. Moreover, 4–75% of patients are non-adherent, resulting in worse disease outcomes. Assuming complete adherence, we previously showed model-informed precision dosing (MIPD) to be superior to conventional and CYP2D6-guided dosing in minimising the proportion of patients with subtarget CSS,min ENDX. Given the high non-adherence rate in long-term tamoxifen therapy, this study investigated the impact of non-adherence on CSS,min ENDX target attainment in different dosing strategies. We show that MIPD allows to account for the expected level of non-adherence (here: up to 2 missed doses/week): increasing the MIPD target threshold from 5.97 ng/mL to 9 ng/mL (the lowest reported CSS,min ENDX in CYP2D6 normal metabolisers) as a safeguard resulted in the lowest interindividual variability and proportion of patients with subtarget CSS,min ENDX even in non-adherent patients. This is a significant improvement to conventional and CYP2D6-guided dosing. Adding a fixed increment to the originally selected dose is not recommended, since it inflates interindividual variability.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14248247
Volume :
14
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Pharmaceuticals
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.2c22f6de0b6c42f6b68afc845c3dd2b6
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/ph14020115