Abstract

The pharmacokinetics in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) has long been thought to differ considerably from that in healthy volunteers. For highly protein bound β-lactams, profound pharmacokinetic differences were observed between comparatively morbid patients with CF and healthy volunteers. These differences could be explained by body weight and body composition for β-lactams with low protein binding. This study aimed to develop a novel population modeling approach to describe the pharmacokinetic differences between both subject groups by estimating protein binding. Eight patients with CF (lean body mass [LBM]: 39.8 ± 5.4kg) and six healthy volunteers (LBM: 53.1 ± 9.5kg) received 1027.5 mg cefotiam intravenously. Plasma concentrations and amounts in urine were simultaneously modelled. Unscaled total clearance and volume of distribution were 3% smaller in patients with CF compared to those in healthy volunteers. After allometric scaling by LBM to account for body size and composition, the remaining pharmacokinetic differences were explained by estimating the unbound fraction of cefotiam in plasma. The latter was fixed to 50% in male and estimated as 54.5% in female healthy volunteers as well as 56.3% in male and 74.4% in female patients with CF. This novel approach holds promise for characterizing the pharmacokinetics in special patient populations with altered protein binding.

Highlights

  • The pharmacokinetics (PK) of patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) has been reported to considerably differ from that in healthy volunteers since the 1970s [1,2,3,4]

  • We accounted for the differences in body size and body composition via allometric scaling by lean body mass (LBM)

  • While we did not quantify protein binding in this study, our models considered that cefotiam may have a larger unbound fraction in plasma of patients with CF compared to that in healthy volunteers based on results on other β-lactams [5,6,9,44,45,46,48]

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Summary

Introduction

The pharmacokinetics (PK) of patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) has been reported to considerably differ from that in healthy volunteers since the 1970s [1,2,3,4] This was especially true for early studies in patients with CF for β-lactams with high protein binding (such as dicloxacillin and cloxacillin) [5,6]. Recent PK studies [7,8,9,10,11] assessed β-lactams with anti-pseudomonal activity; these compounds had low or intermediate protein binding with unbound fractions of 49% or higher These studies employed population PK modeling to account for the differences in body size and body composition via allometric scaling based on lean body mass (LBM). This was in good agreement with the PK differences for other β-lactams with low protein binding [7,8,10,11] and with generally similar (or only slightly higher) renal function in patients with CF compared to that in healthy volunteers [1,12,13,14]

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