Abstract

Vericiguat is an oral soluble guanylate cyclase stimulator and enhances the cyclic guanosine monophosphate pathway independently of nitric oxide as well as synergistically in normal- and low-nitric oxide conditions. This review describes the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic profile of vericiguat and summarizes the effect of vericiguat on cardiac electrophysiology and population pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic relationships. Vericiguat demonstrates virtually complete absorption and increased exposure with food. Vericiguat has high oral bioavailability when taken with food (93.0%) with dose-proportional pharmacokinetics in healthy volunteers. Vericiguat has slightly less than dose-proportional pharmacokinetics with a slight decrease in bioavailability at higher doses in patients with heart failure (HF) with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF). Vericiguat is a low-clearance drug, with a half-life of approximately 20h in healthy volunteers and 30h in patients with HFrEF. Most drug metabolism is achieved by glucuronidation. Vericiguat has pharmacodynamic effects as expected from its pharmacological mechanism of action (i.e., relaxation of the smooth muscles in the vasculature leading to changes in hemodynamics). In the VICTORIA trial (NCT02861534), which enrolled patients with HFrEF, no meaningful exposure-response relationships for the incidence of symptomatic hypotension or syncope were evident. There were no significant imbalances in the incidence of undesirable hemodynamic-related effects (symptomatic hypotension and syncope) in subgroups with HFrEF defined by sex, age, race, and renal impairment. In addition, most patients achieved the 10-mg target dose per the blood pressure-guided titration regimen. No dose adjustments due to body weight, age, sex, race, or hepatic/renal impairment are necessary in adult patients with HFrEF. Observed and predicted changes in vericiguat exposure when co-administered with perpetrator drugs were small and not clinically meaningful. In addition, vericiguat has low potential as a perpetrator to affect exposure and/or pharmacodynamic effects of drugs commonly prescribed in patients with heart failure; therefore, no dose adjustment of these drugs is required in patients taking vericiguat. There is limited experience on the combined use of vericiguat with long-acting nitrates in patients with HFrEF. The ongoing VICTOR trial (NCT05093933), which is investigating vericiguat in patients with HFrEF, permits the co-administration of long-acting nitrates. Combined use of vericiguat and phosphodiesterase type-5 inhibitors has not been studied in patients with HFrEF and is therefore not recommended because of the potential increased risk for symptomatic hypotension. Vericiguat was not associated with electrophysiological abnormalities in preclinical and clinical studies up to the approved dose of 10 mg at steady state. Vericiguat is approved for the treatment of recently decompensated patients with worsening HFrEF. Vericiguat's safety and efficacy profile in patients with HFrEF will be further characterized by the VICTOR trial (NCT05093933) in adults without recent decompensation and in a pediatric population with HF due to left ventricular systolic dysfunction (VALOR trial, NCT05714085).

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call