Abstract

AimsThe aim was to investigate the QT effect of a single dose combination regimen of piperaquine phosphate (PQP) and a novel aromatic trioxolane, OZ439, for malaria treatment.MethodsExposure–response (ER) analysis was performed on data from a placebo-controlled, single dose, study with OZ439 and PQP. Fifty-nine healthy subjects aged 18 to 55 years received OZ439 alone or placebo in a first period, followed by OZ439 plus PQP or matching placebos in period 2. OZ439 and PQP doses ranged from 100–800 mg and 160–1440 mg, respectively. Twelve-lead ECG tracings and PK samples were collected serially pre- and post-dosing.ResultsA significant relation between plasma concentrations and placebo-corrected change from baseline QTcF (ΔΔQTcF) was demonstrated for piperaquine, but not for OZ439, with a mean slope of 0.047 ms per ng ml−1 (90% CI 0.038, 0.057). Using an ER model that accounts for plasma concentrations of both piperaquine and OZ439, a largest mean QTcF effect of 14 ms (90% CI 10, 18 ms) and 18 ms (90% CI 14, 22 ms) was predicted at expected plasma concentrations of a single dose 800 mg OZ439 combined with PQP 960 mg (188 ng ml−1) and 1440 mg (281 ng ml−1), respectively, administered in the fasted state.ConclusionsPiperaquine prolongs the QTc interval in a concentration-dependent way. A single dose regimen combining 800 mg OZ439 with 960 mg or 1440 mg PQP is expected to result in lower peak piperaquine plasma concentrations compared with available 3 day PQP-artemisinin combinations and can therefore be predicted to cause less QTc prolongation.

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