4.7 Article

Population Pharmacokinetics of Antimalarial Naphthoquine in Combination with Artemisinin in Tanzanian Children and Adults: Dose Optimization

Journal

ANTIMICROBIAL AGENTS AND CHEMOTHERAPY
Volume 66, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/aac.01696-21

Keywords

dose optimization; malaria; population pharmacokinetics

Funding

  1. Novartis AG, Basel, Switzerland
  2. Basel Stadt
  3. WWARN
  4. Swiss National Science Foundation Professorship [PP00P3_170702]

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This study characterized the pharmacokinetics of ART-NQ in adults and children, providing valuable information for determining drug concentrations in patients during treatment.
The combination antimalarial therapy of artemisinin-naphthoquine (ART-NQ) was developed as a single-dose therapy, aiming to improve adherence relative to the multiday schedules of other artemisinin combination therapies. The pharmacokinetics of ART-NQ has not been well characterized, especially in children. A pharmacokinetic study was conducted in adults and children over 5 years of age (6 to 10, 11 to 17, and 18 years of age) with uncomplicated malaria in Tanzania. The median weights for the three age groups were 20, 375, and 55 kg, respectively. Twenty-nine patients received single doses of 20 mg/kg of body weight for artemisinin and 8 mg/kg for naphthoquine, and plasma drug concentrations were assessed at 13 time points over 42 days from treatment. We used nonlinear mixed-effects modeling to interpret the data, and allometric scaling was employed to adjust for the effect of body size. The pharmacokinetics of artemisinin was best described by one-compartment model and that of naphthoquine by a two-compartment disposition model. Clearance values for a typical patient (55-kg body weight and 44.3-kg fat-free mass) were estimated as 66.7 L/h (95% confidence interval [CI], 57.3 to 785 1/h) for artemisinin and 44.2 L/h (95% CI, 37.9 to 50.6 L/h) for naphthoquine. Nevertheless, we show via simulation that patients weighing >= 70 kg achieve on average a 30% lower day 7 concentration compared to a 48-kg reference patient at the doses tested, suggesting dose increases may be warranted to ensure adequate exposure.

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