Sean M McCann, Jiali Wen, Stephen J Balevic, William J Muller, Amira Al-Uzri, Chi D Hornik, Marisa L Meyer, Sarah G Anderson, Elizabeth H Payne, Sitora Turdalieva, James M Chamberlain, Daniel Gonzalez
{"title":"扩展地西泮的药代动力学模型,以表征患有和非肥胖儿童的静脉注射和口服数据。","authors":"Sean M McCann, Jiali Wen, Stephen J Balevic, William J Muller, Amira Al-Uzri, Chi D Hornik, Marisa L Meyer, Sarah G Anderson, Elizabeth H Payne, Sitora Turdalieva, James M Chamberlain, Daniel Gonzalez","doi":"10.1002/jcph.70027","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Diazepam is a benzodiazepine approved for use in adults and children. The label incorporates recommended dosing for status epilepticus in children. Published population pharmacokinetic (PK) modeling recommends an intravenous bolus dose of 0.2 mg/kg capped at 8 mg to reach the suggested target exposure of 200-600 ng/mL at 10 min post dose in children up to 17 years of age. This model was developed for children generally without obesity based on IV data, and it is unclear how increased body weight may affect exposure or target attainment given capped dosing. Diazepam concentrations after IV or oral administration for 61 children aged 2.5 to 20.6 years were used to externally evaluate the model including the addition of fixed oral absorption parameters. Then, PK parameters were re-estimated with the external population alone and again in combination with the original population. Re-estimated parameters from the combined population were used to simulate recommended dosing for children with and without obesity. The external dataset included 88 plasma concentrations from 61 children (54 with obesity) receiving diazepam per standard of care. The external evaluation resulted in 34.5% of predicted values within 30% of the observed concentration. Parameter re-estimation resulted in increased central volume of distribution (26% increase from a previous model), reduced peripheral volume of distribution and intercompartmental clearance, and similar clearance estimates. Simulations demonstrated that dosing caps may prevent children with obesity from reaching the suggested target exposure that is recommended for the treatment of status epilepticus. Further study is needed to evaluate the target exposure range in this population.</p>","PeriodicalId":48908,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Clinical Pharmacology","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.9000,"publicationDate":"2025-04-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Expansion of a Pharmacokinetic Model for Diazepam to Characterize Real-World IV and Oral Data in Children With and Without Obesity.\",\"authors\":\"Sean M McCann, Jiali Wen, Stephen J Balevic, William J Muller, Amira Al-Uzri, Chi D Hornik, Marisa L Meyer, Sarah G Anderson, Elizabeth H Payne, Sitora Turdalieva, James M Chamberlain, Daniel Gonzalez\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/jcph.70027\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Diazepam is a benzodiazepine approved for use in adults and children. The label incorporates recommended dosing for status epilepticus in children. Published population pharmacokinetic (PK) modeling recommends an intravenous bolus dose of 0.2 mg/kg capped at 8 mg to reach the suggested target exposure of 200-600 ng/mL at 10 min post dose in children up to 17 years of age. This model was developed for children generally without obesity based on IV data, and it is unclear how increased body weight may affect exposure or target attainment given capped dosing. Diazepam concentrations after IV or oral administration for 61 children aged 2.5 to 20.6 years were used to externally evaluate the model including the addition of fixed oral absorption parameters. Then, PK parameters were re-estimated with the external population alone and again in combination with the original population. Re-estimated parameters from the combined population were used to simulate recommended dosing for children with and without obesity. The external dataset included 88 plasma concentrations from 61 children (54 with obesity) receiving diazepam per standard of care. The external evaluation resulted in 34.5% of predicted values within 30% of the observed concentration. Parameter re-estimation resulted in increased central volume of distribution (26% increase from a previous model), reduced peripheral volume of distribution and intercompartmental clearance, and similar clearance estimates. Simulations demonstrated that dosing caps may prevent children with obesity from reaching the suggested target exposure that is recommended for the treatment of status epilepticus. 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Expansion of a Pharmacokinetic Model for Diazepam to Characterize Real-World IV and Oral Data in Children With and Without Obesity.
Diazepam is a benzodiazepine approved for use in adults and children. The label incorporates recommended dosing for status epilepticus in children. Published population pharmacokinetic (PK) modeling recommends an intravenous bolus dose of 0.2 mg/kg capped at 8 mg to reach the suggested target exposure of 200-600 ng/mL at 10 min post dose in children up to 17 years of age. This model was developed for children generally without obesity based on IV data, and it is unclear how increased body weight may affect exposure or target attainment given capped dosing. Diazepam concentrations after IV or oral administration for 61 children aged 2.5 to 20.6 years were used to externally evaluate the model including the addition of fixed oral absorption parameters. Then, PK parameters were re-estimated with the external population alone and again in combination with the original population. Re-estimated parameters from the combined population were used to simulate recommended dosing for children with and without obesity. The external dataset included 88 plasma concentrations from 61 children (54 with obesity) receiving diazepam per standard of care. The external evaluation resulted in 34.5% of predicted values within 30% of the observed concentration. Parameter re-estimation resulted in increased central volume of distribution (26% increase from a previous model), reduced peripheral volume of distribution and intercompartmental clearance, and similar clearance estimates. Simulations demonstrated that dosing caps may prevent children with obesity from reaching the suggested target exposure that is recommended for the treatment of status epilepticus. Further study is needed to evaluate the target exposure range in this population.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology (JCP) is a Human Pharmacology journal designed to provide physicians, pharmacists, research scientists, regulatory scientists, drug developers and academic colleagues a forum to present research in all aspects of Clinical Pharmacology. This includes original research in pharmacokinetics, pharmacogenetics/pharmacogenomics, pharmacometrics, physiologic based pharmacokinetic modeling, drug interactions, therapeutic drug monitoring, regulatory sciences (including unique methods of data analysis), special population studies, drug development, pharmacovigilance, womens’ health, pediatric pharmacology, and pharmacodynamics. Additionally, JCP publishes review articles, commentaries and educational manuscripts. The Journal also serves as an instrument to disseminate Public Policy statements from the American College of Clinical Pharmacology.