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Erschienen in: Clinical Pharmacokinetics 2/2021

Open Access 20.08.2020 | Original Research Article

Population Pharmacokinetics of Brigatinib in Healthy Volunteers and Patients With Cancer

verfasst von: Neeraj Gupta, Xiaohui Wang, Elliot Offman, Marita Prohn, Narayana Narasimhan, David Kerstein, Michael J. Hanley, Karthik Venkatakrishnan

Erschienen in: Clinical Pharmacokinetics | Ausgabe 2/2021

Abstract

Background and objectives

Brigatinib is an oral tyrosine kinase inhibitor approved in multiple countries for the treatment of patients with anaplastic lymphoma kinase-positive metastatic non-small cell lung cancer who have progressed on or are intolerant to crizotinib. We report a population pharmacokinetic model-based analysis for brigatinib.

Methods

Plasma concentration–time data were collected from 442 participants (105 healthy volunteers and 337 patients with cancer) who received single or multiple doses of oral brigatinib in one of five trials. Data were analyzed using non-linear mixed-effects modeling (NONMEM software version 7.3).

Results

Brigatinib plasma concentrations were best described by a three-compartment model with a transit compartment input (number of transit compartments = 2.35; mean transit time = 0.9 h). The final model included albumin as a covariate on apparent clearance. None of the additional covariates examined, including sex, age, race, body weight, mild or moderate renal impairment, total bilirubin, aspartate aminotransferase, and alanine aminotransferase, were found to meaningfully explain variability in apparent clearance, suggesting that no dose adjustment is required based on these covariates.

Conclusions

Results from these population pharmacokinetic analyses informed the prescribing guidance for patients with mild or moderate renal impairment in the US Prescribing Information and the European Summary of Product Characteristics for brigatinib.
Hinweise

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (https://​doi.​org/​10.​1007/​s40262-020-00929-4) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Narayana Narasimhan and David Kerstein were employees of ARIAD Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited, Cambridge, MA, USA, at the time the study was conducted.
Karthik Venkatakrishnan was an employee of Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited, Cambridge, MA, USA, at the time the study was conducted.
Key Points
Brigatinib pharmacokinetic data from 442 adults (105 healthy volunteers and 337 patients with cancer) enrolled across five studies were adequately described by a three-compartment model with transit compartment input.
Albumin was included as a covariate on apparent clearance in the final population pharmacokinetic model, explaining approximately 5% of variability in apparent clearance.
Sex, age (18–83 years), race, body weight (40.6–172.0 kg), mild or moderate renal impairment (estimated glomerular filtration rate ≥ 32.7 mL/min/1.73 m2), total bilirubin (1–74 μmol/L), aspartate aminotransferase (10–99 U/L), and alanine aminotransferase (5–129 U/L) were not found to impact brigatinib exposure.

1 Introduction

Brigatinib is an inhibitor of oncogenic variants of the anaplastic lymphoma kinase gene, ALK, including the ALK fusions (e.g., EML4-ALK) that are found in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) [13]. An accelerated approval of brigatinib was granted in the USA in 2017, followed by approval in the European Union and Canada in 2018, based on efficacy and safety results from a randomized, multicenter phase II trial (ALK in Lung Cancer Trial of AP26113 [ALTA], NCT02094573) in adult patients with locally advanced or metastatic ALK-positive NSCLC who had progressed on crizotinib [4]. In ALTA, the recommended dosing regimen of brigatinib (180 mg once daily [qd] with a 7-day lead-in at 90 mg qd) demonstrated high systemic and central nervous system response rates and median progression-free survival of 16.7 months in crizotinib-refractory patients [5, 6]. The step-up brigatinib dosing regimen (180 mg qd with a 7-day lead-in at 90 mg qd) was selected because starting treatment at the lower initial dose (90 mg) mitigated the risk of moderate-to-severe pulmonary adverse events that have been observed in a small subset of patients within the first 7 days after initiation of higher doses of brigatinib, while maintaining the efficacy associated with the 180-mg dose [3, 4, 7, 8]. A phase III trial (ALTA-1L) is comparing the safety and efficacy of brigatinib vs crizotinib in patients with ALK + NSCLC who are ALK inhibitor naive [8]. At the first prespecified interim analysis of ALTA-1L, the primary endpoint was met, demonstrating superior progression-free survival assessed by a blinded independent review committee in the brigatinib arm compared with the crizotinib arm (hazard ratio, 0.49; p < 0.001; 12-month event-free rate, 67%, brigatinib; 43%, crizotinib) [8].
Brigatinib has high solubility and permeability and is orally bioavailable. It is approximately 90% bound to human plasma proteins [2, 9, 10]. The mean plasma elimination half-life is 25 h [9]. Following oral administration of a single 180-mg dose of radiolabeled brigatinib to healthy volunteers, approximately 65% and 25% of the administered dose was recovered in feces (unchanged brigatinib, 41%) and urine (unchanged brigatinib, 86%), respectively [9]. Approximately 50% of the overall radiolabeled dose was recovered as unchanged drug with the remainder metabolized to a number of inactive or minor metabolites, primarily by cytochrome P450 (CYP) 3A and CYP2C8 [9]. As a renal pathway was not expected to be a major route of clearance for brigatinib, the clinical development program included patients with mild or moderate renal impairment, whereas the effects of severe renal impairment on brigatinib pharmacokinetics were evaluated in a dedicated renal impairment study. Results of this dedicated study in patients with severe renal impairment supported the recommendation of a 50% reduction in the brigatinib dose for these patients as an approximately twofold increase in unbound area under the concentration vs time curve (AUC) from time 0 to infinity (AUC0–∞) was observed in patients with severe renal impairment as compared with patients with normal renal function [9]. Results of a dedicated hepatic impairment study supported the recommendation of no dosage adjustment for patients with mild-to-moderate hepatic impairment (Child–Pugh A and B) and a 40% dose reduction for patients with severe hepatic impairment (Child–Pugh C) owing to an approximately 37% increase in unbound brigatinib systemic exposure (AUC0–∞) in these patients [9]. A food-effect study reported a relatively small decrease of 13% in maximum plasma concentration following a high-fat meal without a corresponding decrease in AUC, thereby supporting the recommendation that brigatinib tablets may be administered without regard to food intake [10].
The objectives of the present analysis were to develop a population pharmacokinetic (PK) model for brigatinib based on available data from relevant phase I/II trials, including the identification and quantification of sources of variability (e.g., age, weight, sex, race, and renal and hepatic function) in brigatinib PK parameters and to determine if dose adjustments are required in patients with ALK-positive NSCLC based on these patient-specific factors.

2 Methods

2.1 Data Collection

Plasma concentrations of brigatinib over time were obtained from three phase I studies conducted in healthy volunteers [10, 11], one phase I/II study conducted in patients with advanced malignancies [3], and one phase II trial in patients with ALK-positive NSCLC, who had progressed on crizotinib [4] (Table 1). The trials in healthy volunteers tested single doses of 90 mg, 120 mg, and 180 mg [11]. One of the phase I trials was a food effect study in which healthy volunteers received brigatinib 180 mg under fasting conditions or after completion of a high-fat meal [10]; only PK data obtained under fasting conditions were included in the population PK analysis. Another of the phase I trials evaluated the effects of rifampin, itraconazole, and gemfibrozil on the pharmacokinetics of brigatinib in healthy volunteers [11]; only data obtained after a single dose of 90 mg or 180 mg of brigatinib (without concomitant administration of rifampin, itraconazole, or gemfibrozil) were included in the population PK analysis. The phase I/II trial in patients with cancer investigated dose regimens ranging from 30 to 300 mg qd and from 60 to 120 mg twice daily [3], and the phase II trial in patients with ALK-positive NSCLC evaluated doses of 90 mg qd and 180 mg qd with a 7-day lead-in at 90 mg qd [4]. The blood sampling schedule for each trial is shown in Table 1. All five trials were performed in accordance with International Council for Harmonisation Good Clinical Practice Guidelines.
Table 1
Studies included in the population pharmacokinetic (PK) analysis
Trial ID/study phase
Description
Volunteers/patientsa
Brigatinib dosing regimens
Blood sampling schedule
No. of PK samples per volunteer/patient
NCT01449461/I/II [3]
Phase I dose-escalation study conducted in patients with advanced malignancies. After the RP2D was identified, patients enrolled in a phase II expansion phase that evaluated three dosing regimens
136
30–300 mg qd or 60, 90, or 120 mg bid
Pre-dose and at 0.5, 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, and 24 h post-dose on day 1 of cycles 1 and 2, and at 48 h in cycle 2
20
AP26113-13-102/I
Single ascending-dose study in healthy volunteers (white and Asian individuals [Japanese])
36
Single doses of 90, 120, or 180 mg
Pre-dose and at 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, 16, 24, 36, 48, and 72 h post-dose
15
AP26113-13-103/I
Single-dose crossover food-effect study in healthy volunteersb
9
Single dose of 180 mg
Pre-dose and at 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, 24, 36, 48, and 72 h post-dose
14
AP26113-15-105/I [11]
Three-cohort, crossover design DDI study with rifampin, itraconazole, and gemfibrozil in healthy volunteers. Participants received a single dose before and after repeated dosing of the interacting drugsc
60
Single dose of 90 or 180 mg
Pre-dose and at 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, 2.5, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, 24, 36, 48, 60, 72, 96, and 120 h post-dose
18
NCT02094573 (ALTA)/II [4]
Study in patients with ALK + NSCLC who had not responded to prior crizotinib
202
Arm A: 90 mg qd
Arm B: 180 mg qd with a 7-day lead-in at 90 mg qd
Day 1 of cycles 2, 3, 4, and 5. In cycle 2, samples were collected pre-dose and at 1, 4, and 6–8 h post-dose. During cycles 3, 4, and 5, one sample was collected pre-dose and another sample 1–8 h post-dose
10
ALK anaplastic lymphoma kinase, bid twice daily, DDI drug–drug interaction, NSCLC non-small cell lung cancer, qd once daily, RP2D recommended phase II dose
aNumber of volunteers/patients included in the analysis dataset
bData obtained after intake of a high-fat meal were not included
cOnly data from treatment period 1 (brigatinib-alone treatment) were included
Two validated liquid chromatographic/mass spectroscopic methods were used to analyze brigatinib PK samples during clinical development. The first method was used initially to analyze all samples in the phase I/II patient trial. This assay had a lower limit of quantitation (LLOQ) and an upper limit of quantitation of 0.100 ng/mL and 500 ng/mL, respectively, for brigatinib. This method had an intra-run precision for brigatinib in human plasma samples for the high- and low-range assays that ranged from 3.3 to 10.0% and 1.1 to 12.7% coefficient of variation (CV), respectively, with bias of − 15.8 to 0.3% and − 8.7 to − 2.3%. Inter-run precision ranged from 4.8 to 8.8% and 3.1 to 8.4% CV, with a bias of − 6.3 to − 1.3% and − 7.3 to − 4.2% [10]. A second method was subsequently developed to quantify brigatinib plasma concentrations higher than 500 ng/mL. This was the principal method used to analyze all plasma samples in the first phase I study in healthy volunteers (AP26113-13-102), the phase I food-effect study (AP26113-13-103), the phase I drug–drug interaction study (AP26113-15-105) [11], and the phase II trial (ALTA) [4]. This single-range assay had an LLOQ and upper limit of quantitation for brigatinib of 25 ng/mL and 2500 ng/mL, respectively, and intra-run precision for brigatinib in human plasma that ranged from 1.0 to 12.9% CV, with a bias of − 11.6 to 5.6%, as well as inter-run precision that ranged from 1.7 to 10.1% CV, with a bias of − 2.5 to 1.1% [10]. Samples quantified as having brigatinib concentrations below the LLOQ of the second method (< 25 ng/mL) were reanalyzed using the first method. Therefore, the effective analytical range employed in the studies included in this population PK analysis ranged from 0.1 to 2500 ng/mL.

2.2 Population Pharmacokinetic Modeling

The population PK analyses were performed using NONMEM (version 7.3; ICON Development Solutions, Hanover, MD, USA [12]). Graphical and descriptive summaries were produced using R [13] version 3.4.4. Data from all five studies were fit simultaneously using the NONMEM first-order conditional estimation algorithm. Because of a low number of samples (< 5%) below the LLOQ of the assays (i.e., < 0.1 ng/mL), no method of imputation nor censoring was warranted for the analysis. Based on exploratory analyses, two- and three-compartment models with linear elimination with varying parameterization for brigatinib absorption were evaluated for model discrimination. Absorption models tested included first-order input with and without a lag time; dual, parallel first-order processes, each with a unique lag-time; zero-order absorption; mixed first- and zero-order absorption; and, finally, the transit absorption proposed by Savic et al. [14].
Each model included a variance component characterizing inter-individual variability in model parameters that was implemented with the following form:
$$ \theta_{i,n} = \left( {\theta_{{{\text{TV}},n}} e^{{\eta_{i,n} }} } \right) $$
(1)
$$ \left( {\eta_{1, \ldots ,} \eta_{p} } \right) = {\text{MVN}}\left( {0, \varOmega } \right), $$
(2)
where \( \theta_{i,n} \) is the value of the nth PK parameter of the ith individual, \( \theta_{{{\text{TV}},n}} \)is the typical value of the nth PK parameter in the population, and \( n_{i,n} \) is the random inter-individual deviation from the typical value \( \theta_{{{\text{TV}},n}} \)for participant \( i \). Inter-individual random effects \( \left( {\eta_{1, \ldots ,} \eta_{p} } \right) \) are multivariate normally distributed values with mean 0 and estimated variance \( \omega_{n}^{2} \) included in the variance-covariance (Ω) matrix. Residual unexplained variability was evaluated using additive, proportional, and mixed (additive and proportional) models.

2.3 Covariate Model Development

A predetermined list of covariates was tested for effects on PK parameters of apparent clearance (CL/F) and apparent central volume of distribution (V1/F) in two steps. Covariates tested for effects on brigatinib clearance included categorical covariates of sex (male vs female), patient status (cancer patient vs healthy volunteer), and race (white, black, Asian, or other) and continuous covariates of age at study entry, body weight, body surface area, total bilirubin, aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), albumin, and estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR). Covariates tested for effects on the volume of distribution included categorical covariates of sex, patient status, and race and continuous covariates of body weight, body surface area, and albumin. Patient status did not differentiate between patients with NSCLC and other types of ALK + cancer because no differences in pharmacokinetics between these groups were identified in the phase I study. First, a univariate analysis was performed to assess whether a particular covariate resulted in a significant reduction in the minimum value of the objective function (p < 0.01) and resulted in at least a 5% reduction in inter-individual variability for a given parameter [15]. Covariate models meeting both criteria were then evaluated in a stepwise procedure where a covariate was retained in the model, if the reduction in the minimum value of the objective function was ≥ 6.63 (p < 0.01 for one degree of freedom) in the forward inclusion step, and ≥ 10.83 (p < 0.001 for one degree of freedom) in the backward exclusion step [16].
Continuous covariates were tested in the model using power functions with the following form:
$$ \theta_{i} = \theta_{\text{TV}} \cdot \left( {\frac{{{\text{Cov}}_{i} }}{{{\text{Cov}}_{\text{reference value}} }}} \right)^{{\theta_{\text{eff}} }} , $$
(3)
where \( \theta_{i} \) is the population value of PK parameters for participants with covariates equal to \( {\text{Cov}}_{i} \), \( \theta_{\text{TV}} \) is the typical value of the parameter for participants having the covariate equal to the reference value (\( {\text{Cov}}_{\text{reference value}} \)), and \( \theta_{\text{eff}} \) is a parameter characterizing the effect of the covariate on parameter \( \theta \). Reference values were based on the population PK dataset.
Categorical covariates with numerical values from \( 1 \) to \( n \) were tested in the model using an exponential function:
$$ \theta_{i} = \theta_{\text{TV}} \cdot \exp \left( {\mathop \sum \limits_{i = 2}^{n} \theta_{{{\text{effi}},i}} \cdot \left[ {{\text{Cov}} = i} \right]} \right), $$
(4)
where \( \theta_{\text{TV}} \) is the population value of PK parameters for participants in the first (or reference) category and \( { \exp }\left( {\theta_{\text{effi,i}} } \right) \) is the multiplicative effect of the category \( i \) on parameter \( \theta \).

2.4 Model Evaluation and Qualification

Base and covariate models were selected based on the decrease in the minimum objective function value, precision and accuracy of parameter estimation, successful model convergence, and by examining pertinent graphical representations of goodness of fit [1719]. The performance of the final population PK model was also evaluated by a prediction-corrected visual predictive check, where the model was simulated with 1000 replicates and the 95% prediction interval of the 2.5th, 50th, and 97.5th percentiles of predicted (corrected) concentrations were computed and compared with the 2.5th, 50th, and 97.5th percentiles of prediction-corrected observed data [20]. Model robustness and parameter estimates were evaluated by 1000 bootstrap replicates, with replacement.
The final population PK model was also used to simulate steady-state brigatinib AUC and trough concentration exposures in patients receiving the 180-mg once-daily regimen. The effects of covariates of interest (including categorical covariates of sex, race, patient status, and renal function [normal: eGFR ≥ 90 mL/min/1.73 m2; mild impairment: eGFR 60 to < 90 mL/min/1.73 m2; moderate impairment: eGFR 30 to < 60 mL/min/1.73 m2] and continuous covariates of body weight, age, total bilirubin, AST, and ALT) were evaluated by calculating predicted PK parameters for an individual following a brigatinib 180-mg dose at steady state using the individual estimated clearance values and each covariate as a predictor. Median (range) baseline albumin levels used in the simulated patient population were 36 (20–47) g/L based on data from the phase I/II study in patients with advanced malignancies [3]. Model uncertainty was also considered during the simulation by creating 1000 replicates each with a different set of PK parameters obtained by sampling from the variance-covariance matrix of the final population PK model. Simulated AUC and trough concentration data were summarized as geometric mean and 95% confidence intervals, which were based on 1000 sets of bootstrapped parameters.

3 Results

3.1 Dataset Summary

The dataset for the population PK analysis included 442 participants from five clinical studies (Table 1) [3, 4, 11]; 105 participants were healthy volunteers and 337 patients had some form of cancer, of which 201 had ALK-positive NSCLC. Demographics and baseline characteristics of participants included in the analysis dataset are presented in Table 2. Of the 6086 PK samples available, 247 (4.1%) were excluded from the population PK analysis because they were below the limit of quantitation, 80 (1.3%) were excluded because of suspected sampling time recording errors or sample storage issues, and 28 (0.5%) were excluded because the absolute value of their conditional weighted residuals was greater than 4.
Table 2
Demographics and baseline characteristics of participants in the population pharmacokinetic (PK) analysis dataset
Covariates
n = 442
Continuous covariates, median (range)
 Age (years)
52 (18–83)
 Body weight (kg)
73 (41–172)
 Height (cm)
167.6 (137.2–196.0)
 BMI (kg/m2)
25.3 (15.6–50.3)
 ALT (U/L)
25 (5–129)
 AST (U/L)
25 (10–99)
 Total bilirubin (µmol/L)
9 (1–74)
 Albumin (g/dL)
38 (20–56)
 CrCL (mL/min)
98.8 (32.7–235.6)
 eGFR (mL/min/1.73 m2)
85.6 (32.7–277.5)
Categorical covariates, n (%)
Sex
 Male
227 (51.4)
 Female
215 (48.6)
Race
 White
304 (68.8)
 Asian
103 (23.3)
 Black
26 (5.9)
 Other
9 (2.0)
ECOG status
 0
105 (23.8)
 1
110 (24.9)
 2
213 (48.2)
 3
14 (3.2)
Patients with cancer
337 (76.2)a
Healthy volunteers
105 (23.8)
ALK anaplastic lymphoma kinase, ALT alanine aminotransferase, AST aspartate aminotransferase, BMI body mass index, CrCL creatinine clearance, ECOG Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group, eGFR estimated glomerular filtration rate, NSCLC non-small cell lung cancer
aPK data in patients with cancer were obtained from 136 of 137 patients in the phase I/II study and 202 of 222 patients in the phase II ALTA study. The phase I/II study included 128 patients with NSCLC (79 were ALK +) and 9 patients with other malignancies, which included one patient with adenocarcinoma of unknown origin (ALK +), one cancer of unknown primary origin (ALK-rearranged), one cholangiocarcinoma, one colon cancer, two inflammatory myofibroblastic tumors (ALK +), one neuroendocrine carcinoma (ALK +), one pancreatic adenocarcinoma, and one small-cell lung carcinoma [3]. All patients in the phase II study had ALK + NSCLC [4]

3.2 Population Pharmacokinetic Model Development

Based on exploratory and preliminary population PK analyses, two- and three-compartment models with linear elimination and varying parameterization for brigatinib absorption were selected for model discrimination. A three-compartment model with transit absorption resulted in the lowest objective function value (Fig. 1a). This model included random effects on CL/F, V1/F, the number of transit compartments, and mean transit time along with a proportional residual error model. A correlation (block variance) term between the random effects of CL/F and V1/F was found to improve model performance. Ultimately, including random effects on the second peripheral volume and fixing the number of transit compartments to an estimated value of 2.35 produced a model with the best fit.
Univariate covariate analyses demonstrated that models with covariates of weight, sex, age, race, ALT, AST, total bilirubin, and eGFR did not reduce CL/F inter-individual variability by at least 5%. Only models with covariates of population (patients with cancer vs healthy volunteers) and albumin on CL/F resulted in at least a 5% reduction in CL/F inter-individual variability. Thus, only these two covariates were included in a stepwise analysis. The most significant covariate identified in the stepwise analysis was patient status (patients with cancer vs healthy volunteers). However, upon graphical examination (Electronic Supplementary Material [ESM] 1), patient status appeared to be correlated with serum albumin levels, such that patients with cancer had lower levels of albumin than healthy volunteers. As albumin may provide a more mechanistic explanation for the effect on brigatinib clearance, it was elected to retain the albumin effect on CL/F (a continuous covariate that is expected to be more statistically robust) in lieu of patient vs healthy volunteer status (a categorical variable). Further exploration of a model that included both albumin and patient vs healthy volunteer status did not result in a ≥ 5% change in CL/F inter-individual variability. Hence, the final model only had albumin as a covariate. Inclusion of albumin explained approximately 5% of the variability in CL/F, with patients at the 5th and 95th percentiles of albumin predicted to have approximately 22% lower and 20% higher CL/F, respectively, than a patient with the median albumin value.

3.3 Pharmacokinetic Model Assessment

Plots of observed brigatinib concentrations vs both population- and individual-predicted concentrations (ESM 2a), as well as plots of conditional weighted residuals vs time and predicted concentration (ESM 2b) indicated that the final model adequately described the observed data. The final model parameters, presented in Table 3, were estimated with good precision (CV < 20%) and with shrinkage values < 20% for clearance and volume parameters [18]. The CL/F in a typical individual (median) was estimated to be 10.6 L/h and, based on the inter-individual variability (48.4%), would be expected to vary from 4.8 to 24.0 L/h in 90% of the population. The V1/F was estimated at 207 L with inter-individual variability of 55.6%, implying that 90% of the population would have a volume of distribution between 83 and 520 L. A prediction-corrected visual predictive check indicated that the model was appropriately specified, as the model-predicted median and 95% confidence interval for each binned group of simulated concentrations largely encompassed the observed data (Fig. 1b; ESM 2c). Of 1000 bootstrap replicates, 87% achieved successful convergence and the final model parameters fell within the 95% confidence interval for the bootstrapped estimates (Table 3).
Table 3
Parameter estimates based on the final population pharmacokinetic (PK) model
Parameter
Model estimate (% CV)
Inter-individual variability,a % (% CV)
% η Shrinkage
Medianb (2.5th to 97.5th percentile)
CL/F (L/h)
10.6 (2.7)
48.4 (7.1)
2.0
10.6 (10.2–11.1)
V1/F (L)
207 (3.8)
55.6 (8.4)
7.2
208 (193–219)
Q1/F (L/h)
12.6 (9.2)
12.8 (10.5–16.2)
V2/F (L)
114 (11.2)
95.2 (12.2)
16.8
118 (83.6–147)
Q2/F (L/h)
2.7 (18.2)
2.46 (1.09–4.76)
V3/F (L)
78.5 (8.6)
82.3 (57.6–112)
No. of transit compartmentsc
2.35
103 (16.6)
43.3
2.35 (–)
Mean transit time (h)
0.9 (3.6)
59 (7.5)
36.8
0.9 (0.8–1.0)
Albumin covariate effect on CL/F
× (albumin/38)0.661 (10.7)
0.656 (0.474–0.849)
Proportional error
0.269 (0.6)
10.7
0.269 (0.256–0.283)
Covariance (CL/F, V1/F)
0.228 (7.8)
0.226 (0.191–0.270)
Condition numberd
115
CL/F apparent extravascular clearance from the central compartment, CV coefficient of variation, Q1/F apparent intercompartmental distributional clearance between the central and first peripheral compartments, Q2/F apparent intercompartmental distributional clearance between the central and second peripheral compartments, RSE relative standard error, V1/F apparent central compartment volume of distribution, V2/F apparent volume of the first peripheral compartment, V3/F apparent volume of the second peripheral compartment
aInter-individual variability is the square root of the estimated between-participant variation multiplied by 100%
bBootstrap of 1000 replicates with replacement
cThe number of transit compartments was fixed at the population estimate for the final model. Therefore, no estimate of the precision of the value is provided
dCondition number is defined as the ratio of the largest to the smallest eigenvalue of the correlation matrix
The effects of covariates of interest (including body weight, sex, age, race, mild or moderate renal impairment, total bilirubin, AST, and ALT) were evaluated by calculating predicted AUC for an individual following a brigatinib 180-mg dose at steady state using the individual estimated clearance values and each covariate as a predictor. Results of these simulations indicated that none of the covariates examined had clinically meaningful effects on brigatinib AUC (Figs. 2, 3). Post hoc stratification of predicted AUC (following 180 mg qd) by each covariate also confirmed that none of these covariates had a clinically meaningful effect on brigatinib systemic exposure (Fig. 4).

4 Discussion

Model-informed approaches drive patient-centric and efficient drug development and are vital to the success of accelerated oncology drug development programs [2123]. The current population PK analyses based on data from five clinical studies showed that plasma concentrations of brigatinib following single and repeated doses in both healthy volunteers and patients with cancer were best described by a three-compartment model with a transit compartment for absorption. The effect of albumin level on CL/F was the only covariate included in the final model. Inclusion of albumin in the model explained approximately 5% of the variability in CL/F, indicating the lack of a clinically meaningful effect on brigatinib systemic exposure. The mechanistic reasons for the identified covariate effect of albumin on CL/F may be multifactorial. Decreasing albumin levels was associated with relatively minor decreases in total CL/F of brigatinib. If the effect of albumin was mainly related to an effect on plasma free fraction, an inverse relationship for total clearance would be expected. However, given the positive relationship that was estimated between albumin and total CL/F, the direction of this observed covariate effect suggests that the underlying mechanism is likely unrelated to a variation in plasma free fraction. One possible explanation is that decreased albumin may be indicative of advanced disease pathophysiology in patients with cancer, with associated pro-inflammatory status that may have resulted in suppression of CYP3A expression, leading to decreased CL/F of brigatinib. Importantly, irrespective of the underlying mechanism, the effect of albumin on CL/F (and thus AUC) can be considered minor and not of clinical relevance when viewed in relation to overall variability.
Covariates of body weight, sex, age, race, mild or moderate renal impairment, and mild hepatic impairment did not meaningfully explain variability in CL/F in the final population PK model, suggesting that no adjustment of the dose of brigatinib is required based on these covariates. Fixed dosing without correction for body size metrics is generally preferred for oral anticancer drugs because it simplifies dosing in clinical development and for patients and may also reduce the potential for dose calculation errors [24, 25].
Early demonstration of the lack of race effects on the PK profile of brigatinib in healthy Asian and white volunteers from an ethnobridging study (data on file), coupled with the current results of population PK modeling showing a lack of race effects, obviated the need for a phase I study in Japanese patients with cancer and enabled Asia-inclusive phase II/III trials [4, 8], which included study sites in Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, and Taiwan. Prospective consideration of potential PK differences in Asian patient populations can help to decrease access lag time in those populations and has become an important component of rationalized global clinical development strategies for investigational oncology drugs [26].
Patients with ALK-positive NSCLC who are prescribed brigatinib may have previously received cisplatin- or carboplatin-based regimens [27]. Therefore, these patients may exhibit varying levels of renal impairment due to nephrotoxicity associated with platinum-based chemotherapy [28, 29]. The results of the current population PK analysis suggested that dosage adjustments are not required for patients with mild or moderate renal impairment, thereby enabling a reduced renal impairment study design and model-informed prescribing guidance for patients with mild or moderate renal impairment [9, 30]. However, a dose reduction is recommended for patients with severe renal impairment based on the results of a dedicated trial in participants with severe renal impairment compared with participants with normal renal function [9, 30].
The final population PK model was also used to simulate steady-state brigatinib AUC in patients receiving 180 mg qd to permit a descriptive comparison of clinical exposures to target inhibition potencies. The distribution of these simulated brigatinib exposures were compared with in vitro estimates of IC50 and IC90 (concentrations of drug producing 50% and 90% inhibition, respectively) for inhibition of native EML4-ALK and mutants associated with resistance to ALK inhibitors (e.g., G1202R) (Fig. 5) [31]. In vitro IC50 and IC90 estimates were adjusted upward by a factor of two to account for the observed in vitro potency shift in the presence of plasma proteins (data on file, Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited). For the 180-mg qd dose, the 5th to 95th percentiles of the calculated Cav (average drug concentration; AUC/24) were 359–1606 ng/mL (614–2749 nM). In cellular assays, the IC90 (concentration of drug producing 90% inhibition) for brigatinib inhibition of native EML4-ALK was 38 nM, with mutant IC90 range of 22–762 nM [31]. After applying the twofold shift factor, the fifth percentile of Cav concentrations at 180 mg qd was 1.7-fold higher than the shifted IC50 of 368 nM for G1202R (an important mutant form of the target that is associated with treatment resistance to ALK inhibitors; Fig. 5) [31, 32]. Taken together, these analyses support the achievement of pharmacologically relevant exposures of brigatinib at clinically recommended doses consistent with the efficacy reported in ALTA.

5 Conclusions

Brigatinib pharmacokinetics in plasma following single and repeated doses in both healthy volunteers and patients with cancer was best described by a three-compartment model with a transit compartment for absorption. Covariates of body weight, sex, age, race, mild or moderate renal impairment, and mild hepatic impairment did not meaningfully explain variability in brigatinib exposure, thereby suggesting that no dose adjustments are required based on these covariates.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank the patients, their families, and their caregivers; the study investigators and their team members at each study site; and colleagues from Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Cambridge, MA, USA, a wholly owned subsidiary of Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited. Professional medical writing assistance was provided by Lauren Gallagher, RPh, PhD, and Lela Creutz, PhD, of Peloton Advantage, LLC, an OPEN Health company, Parsippany, NJ, USA and funded by ARIAD Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

Declarations

Funding

This study was funded by ARIAD Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited.

Conflict of interest

Neeraj Gupta and Michael J. Hanley are employees of Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited. Xiaohui Wang and Elliot Offman are employees of Certara, a consulting firm under contract with Takeda. Marita Prohn is an employee of qPharmetra. Narayana Narasimhan is a former employee and stock owner of ARIAD. David Kerstein is a former employee and stock owner of ARIAD. Karthik Venkatakrishnan is a former employee of Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited.

Ethics Approval

All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical standards of the institutional and/or national research committee and with the 1964 Helsinki Declaration and its later amendments or comparable ethical standards.
Informed consent was obtained from all individual participants included in the study. Additional informed consent was obtained from all individual participants for whom identifying information is included in this article.

Availability of Data and Material

The data sets, including the redacted study protocol, redacted statistical analysis plan, and individual participant data supporting the results reported in this article, will be made available within 3 months from the initial request, to researchers who provide a methodologically sound proposal. The data will be provided after de-identification, in compliance with applicable privacy laws, data protection, and requirements for consent and anonymization.
Open AccessThis article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, which permits any non-commercial use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://​creativecommons.​org/​licenses/​by-nc/​4.​0/​.

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Metadaten
Titel
Population Pharmacokinetics of Brigatinib in Healthy Volunteers and Patients With Cancer
verfasst von
Neeraj Gupta
Xiaohui Wang
Elliot Offman
Marita Prohn
Narayana Narasimhan
David Kerstein
Michael J. Hanley
Karthik Venkatakrishnan
Publikationsdatum
20.08.2020
Verlag
Springer International Publishing
Erschienen in
Clinical Pharmacokinetics / Ausgabe 2/2021
Print ISSN: 0312-5963
Elektronische ISSN: 1179-1926
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40262-020-00929-4

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