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      Population pharmacokinetics and therapeutic response of CGP 56697 (artemether + benflumetol) in malaria patients.

      British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology
      Adolescent, Adult, Antimalarials, pharmacokinetics, pharmacology, therapeutic use, Artemisinins, Double-Blind Method, Drug Combinations, Ethanolamines, Female, Fluorenes, Humans, Malaria, drug therapy, metabolism, Male, Middle Aged, Sesquiterpenes, Treatment Outcome

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          Abstract

          To investigate the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties of artemether and benflumetol in a fixed combination tablet (CGP 56697) and to offer an explanation for the lower than expected cure rate in a Thai clinical trial. Two hundred and sixty patients were enrolled into a randomized, double-blind, parallel group, dose-finding trial. CGP 56697 was given orally, either as: A, 4 x 4 tablets over 48 h; B, 4 x 2 tablets over 48 h or C, 3 x 4 tablets over 24 h. Each tablet contained artemether 20 mg amd benflumetol 120 mg. The pharmacokinetics were determined using a population-based approach combining full profiles (42 patients) and sparse data (218 patients). Parasite clearance time and 28 day cure rate were correlated with the derived pharmacokinetic parameters. The median absorption half-life of benflumetol was 5.3 h, with a tmax of 10 h and terminal elimination half-life of 4.5 days. For artemether (and its metabolite, dihydroartemisinin), the corresponding values were 1.9 (1.9) h, 1.8 (1.2) h, and 0.84 (0.43) h. The variability in bioavailability of artemether and dihydroartemisinin was large both between doses and between patients, but was less pronounced for benflumetol. Compared with the first dose, benflumetol bioavailability was estimated to increase three-fold by the third and fourth doses. Higher artemether or dihydroartemisinin AUC was found to decrease parasite clearance time. Higher benflumetol AUC was found to significantly increase the chance of cure. Using a population-based approach it was confirmed that the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties of benflumetol and artemether differ markedly. Benflumetol AUC is associated with cure and the effect of benflumetol when coadministered with artemether is to prevent recrudescence. The mode of action of benflumetol is consistent with its longer elimination half-life. A short course of low-dose artemether, which is rapidly absorbed and has a short elimination half-life, produced effective parasite clearance. The complementary pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties of benflumetol and artemether was the main rationale for developing a fixed-dose combination. While the 4 x 4 dose regimen is very effective in most endemic areas, the poorer absorption (2.5 fold lower than in China) and the more resistant parasites in Thailand require higher doses of this drug.

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          Nonlinear mixed effects models for repeated measures data.

          We propose a general, nonlinear mixed effects model for repeated measures data and define estimators for its parameters. The proposed estimators are a natural combination of least squares estimators for nonlinear fixed effects models and maximum likelihood (or restricted maximum likelihood) estimators for linear mixed effects models. We implement Newton-Raphson estimation using previously developed computational methods for nonlinear fixed effects models and for linear mixed effects models. Two examples are presented and the connections between this work and recent work on generalized linear mixed effects models are discussed.
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            Estimation of population characteristics of pharmacokinetic parameters from routine clinical data.

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              Clinical pharmacology and therapeutic potential of artemisinin and its derivatives in the treatment of malaria.

              Artemisinin and its derivatives are renowned for their potent antimalarial activity. They have found their way into clinical use in many areas where malaria is endemic. The in vitro concentration at which artemisinin can inhibit 50% of the growth of Plasmodium falciparum ranges from 3 to 30 micrograms/L. The fat-soluble derivatives artemether and arteether are approximately twice as active. The water-soluble dihydro-artemisinin and artesunate are 4 to 5 times more active in vitro. Artemisinin is available only for oral and rectal administration. Absorption is incomplete and elimination is fast, with and elimination half-life of 2 to 5 hours. Plasma concentrations after a single 500 mg oral dose most often exceed 200 micrograms/L. Artesunate and artemether can be considered as prodrugs. Biotransformation into the active metabolite dihydro-artemisinin occurs rapidly--almost immediately for artesunate. The reported elimination half-life of artesunate is less than 1 hour, and for artemether the figure is 3 to 11 hours. The pharmacokinetics of dihydro-artemisinin are not yet completely clear. Elimination is probably also rapid, with an elimination half-life of a few hours. Arteether, dissolved in oil for intramuscular administration, has a much longer elimination half-life of over 20 hours. The clinical efficacy of this group of drugs is characterised by an almost immediate onset and rapid reduction of parasitaemia, with complete clearance in most cases within 48 hours. Efficacy is high even in areas with multidrug-resistant parasite strains. To prevent recrudescence with monotherapy of these compounds, treatment needs to be extended beyond the disappearance of parasites. After 5 days of therapy the rate of recrudescence is approximately 10%. Alternatively, combination with other drugs can be used. Combination with mefloquine is recommended for areas with multidrug-resistant P. falciparum.
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