4.7 Article

Population Pharmacokinetic Model of Oxfendazole and Metabolites in Healthy Adults following Single Ascending Doses

Journal

ANTIMICROBIAL AGENTS AND CHEMOTHERAPY
Volume 65, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/AAC.02129-20

Keywords

anthelmintic drugs; first-in-human; oxfendazole; pharmacometric modeling; population PK analysis

Funding

  1. Division of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, through the Vaccine and Treatment Evaluation Unit [HHSN272200800008C, HHSN24220130020I]
  2. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences [5U54TR001356]

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Oxfendazole is a potent veterinary benzimidazole anthelmintic transitioning to human use for the treatment of parasitic diseases. A population pharmacokinetic model was developed to quantitatively capture the relationship between oxfendazole dose and exposure, providing insight into its nonlinear pharmacokinetics and metabolic processes. The model can be used to predict oxfendazole disposition under new dosing regimens to optimize dosing in humans.
Oxfendazole is a potent veterinary benzimidazole anthelmintic under transition to humans for the treatment of multiple parasitic infectious diseases. The first-inhuman study evaluating the disposition of oxfendazole and its metabolites in healthy adults following single ascending oral doses from 0.5 to 60 mg/kg of body weight shows that oxfendazole pharmacokinetics is substantially nonlinear, which complicates correlating oxfendazole dose to exposure. To quantitatively capture the relation between oxfendazole dose and exposure, a population pharmacokinetic model for oxfendazole and its metabolites, oxfendazole sulfone and fenbendazole, in humans was developed using a nonlinear mixed-effect modeling approach. Our final model incorporated mechanistic characterization of dose-limited bioavailability as well as different oxfendazole metabolic processes and provided insight into the significance of presystemic metabolism in oxfendazole and metabolite disposition. Oxfendazole clinical pharmacokinetics was best described by a one-compartment model with nonlinear absorption and linear elimination. Oxfendazole apparent clearance and apparent volume of distribution were estimated to be 2.57 liters/h and 352 liters, respectively, at the lowest dose (0.5 mg/kg), indicating that oxfendazole is a low extraction drug with moderate distribution. The disposition of both metabolites was adequately characterized by a one-compartment model with formation rate-limited elimination. Fenbendazole formation from oxfendazole was primarily through systemic metabolism, while both presystemic and systemic metabolism were critical to the formation of oxfendazole sulfone. Our model adequately captured the concentration-time profiles of both oxfendazole and its two metabolites in healthy adults over a wide dose range. The model can be used to predict oxfendazole disposition under new dosing regimens to support dose optimization in humans.

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