32 results on '"van Esdonk, Michiel J."'
Search Results
2. Predictive performance of parent-metabolite population pharmacokinetic models of (S)-ketamine in healthy volunteers
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Otto, M. E., Bergmann, K. R., Jacobs, G., and van Esdonk, Michiel J.
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- 2021
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3. The power of modelling pulsatile profiles
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van Esdonk, Michiel J. and Stevens, Jasper
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- 2021
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4. Quantification of the endogenous growth hormone and prolactin lowering effects of a somatostatin-dopamine chimera using population PK/PD modeling
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van Esdonk, Michiel J., Burggraaf, Jacobus, Dehez, Marion, van der Graaf, Piet H., and Stevens, Jasper
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- 2020
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5. A phase 1 trial of AP30663, a KCa2 channel inhibitor in development for conversion of atrial fibrillation.
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Yfanti, Christina, Vestbjerg, Birgitte, van't Westende, Juliette, Edvardsson, Nils, Monfort, Laia Meseguer, Olesen, Morten Salling, Bentzen, Bo Hjorth, Grunnet, Morten, Eveleens Maarse, Boukje C., Diness, Jonas Goldin, Kemme, Michiel J. B., Sørensen, Ulrik, Moerland, Matthijs, van Esdonk, Michiel J., Klaassen, Erica S., Gal, Pim, and Holst, Anders G.
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INTRAVENOUS therapy ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CALCIUM ions ,ARRHYTHMIA ,ATRIAL fibrillation - Abstract
Aims: AP30663 is a novel compound under development for pharmacological conversion of atrial fibrillation by targeting the small conductance Ca2+ activated K+ (KCa2) channel. The aim of this extension phase 1 study was to test AP30663 at higher single doses compared to the first‐in‐human trial. Methods: Sixteen healthy male volunteers were randomized into 2 cohorts: 6‐ and 8‐mg/kg intravenous single‐dose administration of AP30663 vs. placebo. Safety, pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic data were collected. Results: AP30663 was associated with mild and transient infusion site reactions with no clustering of other adverse events but with an estimated maximum mean QTcF interval prolongation of 45.2 ms (95% confidence interval 31.5–58.9) in the 6 mg/kg dose level and 50.4 ms (95% confidence interval 36.7–64.0) with 8 mg/kg. Pharmacokinetics was dose proportional with terminal half‐life of around 3 h. Conclusion: AP30663 in doses up to 8 mg/kg was associated with mild and transient infusion site reactions and an increase of the QTcF interval. Supporting Information support that the QTc effect may be explained by an off‐target inhibition of the IKr channel. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. How are growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor-1 reported as markers for drug effectiveness in clinical acromegaly research? A comprehensive methodologic review
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van Esdonk, Michiel J., van Zutphen, Eline J. M., Roelfsema, Ferdinand, Pereira, Alberto M., van der Graaf, Piet H., Biermasz, Nienke R., Stevens, Jasper, and Burggraaf, Jacobus
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- 2018
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7. A zwitterionic near-infrared fluorophore for real-time ureter identification during laparoscopic abdominopelvic surgery
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de Valk, Kim S., Handgraaf, Henricus J., Deken, Marion M., Sibinga Mulder, Babs G., Valentijn, Adrianus R., Terwisscha van Scheltinga, Anton G., Kuil, Joeri, van Esdonk, Michiel J., Vuijk, Jaap, Bevers, Rob F., Peeters, Koen C., Holman, Fabian A., Frangioni, John V., Burggraaf, Jacobus, and Vahrmeijer, Alexander L.
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- 2019
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8. A two-step deconvolution-analysis-informed population pharmacodynamic modeling approach for drugs targeting pulsatile endogenous compounds
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van Esdonk, Michiel J., Burggraaf, Jacobus, van der Graaf, Piet H., and Stevens, Jasper
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- 2017
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9. Item response theory in early phase clinical trials: Utilization of a reference model to analyze the Montgomery‐Åsberg Depression Rating Scale.
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Otto, Marije E., Bergmann, Kirsten R., de Kam, Marieke L., Recourt, Kasper, Jacobs, Gabriël E., and van Esdonk, Michiel J.
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ITEM response theory ,CLINICAL trials ,MENTAL depression ,LATENT variables ,DATA distribution - Abstract
In clinical trials, Montgomery‐Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) questionnaire data are added up to total scores before analysis, assuming equal contribution of each separate question. Item Response Theory (IRT)‐based analysis avoids this by using individual question responses to determine the latent variable (ψ), which represents a measure of depression severity. However, utilization of IRT in early phase trials remains difficult, because large datasets are needed to develop IRT models. Therefore, we aimed to evaluate the application and assumptions of a reference IRT model for analysis of an early phase trial. A cross‐over, placebo‐controlled study investigating the effect of intravenous racemic ketamine on MADRS scores in patients with treatment‐resistant major depressive disorder was used as a case study. One hundred forty‐seven MADRS responses were measured in 17 patients at five timepoints (predose to 2 weeks after dosing). Two reference IRT models based on different patient populations were selected from literature and used to determine ψ, while testing multiple approaches regarding assumed data distribution. Use of ψ versus total score to determine treatment effect was compared through linear mixed model analysis. Results showed that determined ψ values did not differ significantly between assumed distributions, but were significantly different when changing reference IRT model. Estimated treatment effect size was not significantly affected by chosen approach nor reference population. Finally, increased precision to determine treatment effect was achieved by using IRT versus total scores. This demonstrates the usefulness of reference IRT model application for analysis of questionnaire data in early phase clinical trials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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10. Dose escalations in phase I studies: Feasibility of interpreting blinded pharmacodynamic data.
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Hassing, Gerardus J., van Esdonk, Michiel J., van Westen, Gerard J. P., Cohen, Adam F., Burggraaf, Jacobus, and Gal, Pim
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FEASIBILITY studies , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *DRUG development - Abstract
Aims: During phase I study conduct, blinded data are reviewed to predict the safety of increasing the dose level. The aim of the present study was to describe the probability that effects are observed in blinded evaluations of data in a simulated phase I study design. Methods: An application was created to simulate blinded pharmacological response curves over time for 6 common safety/efficacy measurements in phase I studies for 1 or 2 cohorts (6 active, 2 placebo per cohort). Effect sizes between 0 and 3 between‐measurement standard deviations (SDs) were simulated. Each set of simulated graphs contained the individual response and mean ± SD over time. Reviewers (n = 34) reviewed a median of 100 simulated datasets and indicated whether an effect was present. Results: Increasing effect sizes resulted in a higher chance of the effect being identified by the blinded reviewer. On average, 6% of effect sizes of 0.5 between‐measurement SD were correctly identified, increasing to 72% in 3.0 between‐measurement SD effect sizes. In contrast, on average 92–95% of simulations with no effect were correctly identified, with little effect of between‐measurement variability in single cohort simulations. Adding a dataset of a second cohort at half the simulated dose did not appear to improve the interpretation. Conclusion: Our analysis showed that effect sizes <2× the between‐measurement SD of the investigated outcome frequently go unnoticed by blinded reviewers, indicating that the weight given to these blinded analyses in current phase I practice is inappropriate and should be re‐evaluated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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11. Effects of Mexiletine and Lacosamide on Nerve Excitability in Healthy Subjects: A Randomized, Double‐Blind, Placebo‐Controlled, Crossover Study.
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Ruijs, Titia Q., Koopmans, Ingrid W., de Kam, Marieke L., van Esdonk, Michiel J., Koltzenburg, Martin, Groeneveld, Geert Jan, and Heuberger, Jules A.A.C.
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VIMPAT ,SODIUM channel blockers ,MEXILETINE ,NERVES ,MEDIAN nerve ,PYRETHROIDS - Abstract
Selective voltage‐gated sodium channel blockers are of growing interest as treatment for pain. For drug development of such compounds, it would be critical to have a biomarker that can be used for proof‐of‐mechanism. We aimed to evaluate whether drug‐induced changes in sodium conductance can be detected in the peripheral nerve excitability profile in 18 healthy subjects. In a randomized, double‐blind, 3‐way crossover study, effects of single oral doses of 333 mg mexiletine and 300 mg lacosamide were compared with placebo. On each study visit, motor and sensory nerve excitability measurements of the median nerve were performed (predose; and 3 and 6 hours postdose) using Qtrac. Treatment effects were calculated using an analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) with baseline as covariate. Mexiletine and lacosamide had significant effects on multiple motor and sensory nerve excitability variables. Depolarizing threshold electrotonus (TEd40 (40–60 ms)) decreased by mexiletine (estimated difference (ED) −1.37% (95% confidence interval (CI): −2.20, −0.547; P = 0.002) and lacosamide (ED −1.27%, 95% CI: −2.10, −0.443; P = 0.004) in motor nerves. Moreover, mexiletine and lacosamide decreased superexcitability (less negative) in motor nerves (ED 1.74%, 95% CI: 0.615, 2.87; P = 0.004, and ED 1.47%, 95% CI: 0.341, 2.60; P = 0.013, respectively). Strength‐duration time constant decreased after lacosamide in motor‐ (ED −0.0342 ms, 95% CI: −0.0571, −0.0112; P = 0.005) and sensory nerves (ED −0.0778 ms, 95% CI: −0.116, −0.0399; P < 0.001). Mexiletine and lacosamide significantly decrease excitability of motor and sensory nerves, in line with their suggested mechanism of action. Results of this study indicate that nerve excitability threshold tracking can be an effective pharmacodynamic biomarker. The method could be a valuable tool in clinical drug development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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12. Population pharmacokinetics of clonazepam in saliva and plasma: Steps towards noninvasive pharmacokinetic studies in vulnerable populations.
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Kruizinga, Matthijs D., Zuiker, Rob G. J. A., Bergmann, Kirsten R., Egas, Annelies C., Cohen, Adam F., Santen, Gijs W. E., and van Esdonk, Michiel J.
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CLONAZEPAM ,SALIVA ,PHARMACOKINETICS ,PREDICTION models ,PHARMACODYNAMICS - Abstract
Aim: Traditional studies focusing on the relationship between pharmacokinetics (PK) and pharmacodynamics necessitate blood draws, which are too invasive for children or other vulnerable populations. A potential solution is to use noninvasive sampling matrices, such as saliva. The aim of this study was to develop a population PK model describing the relationship between plasma and saliva clonazepam kinetics and assess whether the model can be used to determine trough plasma concentrations based on saliva samples. Methods: Twenty healthy subjects, aged 18‐30, were recruited and administered 0.5 or 1 mg of clonazepam solution. Paired plasma and saliva samples were obtained until 48 hours post‐dose. A population pharmacokinetic model was developed describing the PK of clonazepam in plasma and the relationship between plasma and saliva concentrations. Bayesian maximum a posteriori optimization was applied to estimate the predictive accuracy of the model. Results: A two‐compartment distribution model best characterized clonazepam plasma kinetics with a mixture component on the absorption rate constants. Oral administration of the clonazepam solution caused contamination of the saliva compartment during the first 4 hours post‐dose, after which the concentrations were driven by the plasma concentrations. Simulations demonstrated that the lower and upper limits of agreements between true and predicted plasma concentrations were −28% to 36% with one saliva sample. Increasing the number of saliva samples improved these limits to −18% to 17%. Conclusion: The developed model described the salivary and plasma kinetics of clonazepam, and could predict steady‐state trough plasma concentrations based on saliva concentrations with acceptable accuracy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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13. Topical Bimiralisib Shows Meaningful Cutaneous Drug Levels in Healthy Volunteers and Mycosis Fungoides Patients but No Clinical Activity in a First-in-Human, Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Wind, Selinde S., Jansen, Manon A. A., Rijsbergen, Melanie, van Esdonk, Michiel J., Ziagkos, Dimitrios, Cheng, Wing C., Niemeyer-van der Kolk, Tessa, Korsten, John, Gruszka, Agnieszka, Schmitz-Rohmer, Debora, Bonnel, David, Legouffe, Raphael, Barré, Florian, Bekkenk, Marcel W., de Haas, Ellen R. M., Quint, Koen D., Rolli, Melanie, Streefkerk, Henk Johan, Burggraaf, Jacobus, and Vermeer, Maarten H.
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DRUG efficacy ,MYCOSIS fungoides ,MTOR inhibitors ,PLACEBOS ,LIVER transplantation ,ADVERSE health care events ,CUTANEOUS T-cell lymphoma ,PATIENT safety - Abstract
Simple Summary: Primary cutaneous T-cell lymphomas (CTCLs) are a group of lymphomas that present in the skin without extracutaneous localizations at diagnosis. Recent studies in clinical and translational research augmented our understanding of the pathogenesis and pathophysiology of different subtypes of CTCL, enabling the identification of novel therapeutic drug targets. In this study, the primary focus is on bimiralisib gel 2%, a dual pan-class PI3K/mTOR inhibitor, and its potential to inhibit the PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling pathway as a novel therapeutic target in CTCL. Mycosis fungoides (MF) is a subtype of CTCL with a low incidence and high medical need for novel treatments. The objective of this randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blinded, first-in-human study was to evaluate safety, efficacy, cutaneous and systemic pharmacokinetics (PK) of topical bimiralisib in healthy volunteers (HVs) and MF patients. In this trial, a total of 6 HVs and 19 early-stage MF patients were treated with 2.0% bimiralisib gel and/or placebo. Drug efficacy was assessed by the Composite Assessment of Index Lesion Severity (CAILS) score, supported by objective measuring methods to quantify lesion severity. PK blood samples were collected frequently and cutaneous PK was investigated in skin punch biopsies on the last day of treatment. Local distribution of bimiralisib in HVs showed a mean exposure of 2.54 µg/g in the epidermis. A systemic concentration was observed after application of a target dose of 2 mg/cm
2 on 400 cm2 , with a mean Cavg of 0.96 ng/mL. Systemic exposure of bimiralisib was reached in all treated MF patients, and normalized plasma concentrations showed a 144% increased exposure compared to HVs, with an observed mean Cavg of 4.49 ng/mL and a mean cutaneous concentration of 5.3 µg/g. No difference in CAILS or objective lesion severity quantification upon 42 days of once-daily treatment was observed in the MF patient group. In general, the treatment was well tolerated in terms of local reactions as well as systemic adverse events. In conclusion, we showed that topical bimiralisib treatment leads to (i) meaningful cutaneous drug levels and (ii) well-tolerated systemic drug exposure in MF patients and (iii) a lack of clinical efficacy, in need of further exploration due to numerous unknown factors, before depreciation of topical bimiralisib as a novel therapeutic drug for CTCLs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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14. Effect of hydroxychloroquine on the cardiac ventricular repolarization: A randomized clinical trial.
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Eveleens Maarse, Boukje C., Graff, Claus, Kanters, Jørgen K., van Esdonk, Michiel J., Kemme, Michiel J. B., in 't Veld, Aliede E., Jansen, Manon A. A., Moerland, Matthijs, and Gal, Pim
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CLINICAL trials ,HYDROXYCHLOROQUINE ,CONFIDENCE intervals - Abstract
Aims: Hydroxychloroquine has been suggested as possible treatment for severe acute respiratory syndrome‐coronavirus‐2. Studies reported an increased risk of QTcF‐prolongation after treatment with hydroxychloroquine. The aim of this study was to analyse the concentration‐dependent effects of hydroxychloroquine on the ventricular repolarization, including QTcF‐duration and T‐wave morphology. Methods: Twenty young (≤30 y) and 20 elderly (65–75 y) healthy male subjects were included. Subjects were randomized to receive either a total dose of 2400 mg hydroxychloroquine over 5 days, or placebo (ratio 1:1). Follow‐up duration was 28 days. Electrocardiograms (ECGs) were recorded as triplicate at baseline and 4 postdose single recordings, followed by hydroxychloroquine concentration measurements. ECG intervals (RR, QRS, PR, QTcF, J‐Tpc, Tp‐Te) and T‐wave morphology, measured with the morphology combination score, were analysed with a prespecified linear mixed effects concentration–effect model. Results: There were no significant associations between hydroxychloroquine concentrations and ECG characteristics, including RR‐, QRS‐ and QTcF‐interval (P =.09,.34,.25). Mean ΔΔQTcF‐interval prolongation did not exceed 5 ms and the upper limit of the 90% confidence interval did not exceed 10 ms at the highest measured concentrations (200 ng/mL). There were no associations between hydroxychloroquine concentration and the T‐wave morphology (P =.34 for morphology combination score). There was no significant effect of age group on ECG characteristics. Conclusion: In this study, hydroxychloroquine did not affect ventricular repolarization, including the QTcF‐interval and T‐wave morphology, at plasma concentrations up to 200 ng/mL. Based on this analysis, hydroxychloroquine does not appear to increase the risk of QTcF‐induced arrhythmias. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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15. Phase 1 clinical trial of losmapimod in facioscapulohumeral dystrophy: Safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and target engagement.
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Mellion, Michelle L., Ronco, Lucienne, Berends, Cecile L., Pagan, Lisa, Brooks, Sander, van Esdonk, Michiel J., van Brummelen, Emilie M. J., Odueyungbo, Adefowope, Thompson, Lorin A., Hage, Michelle, Badrising, Umesh A., Raines, Shane, Tracewell, William G., van Engelen, Baziel, Cadavid, Diego, and Groeneveld, Geert J.
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CLINICAL trials ,PHARMACOKINETICS ,DYSTROPHY ,MAGNETIC resonance ,SAFETY - Abstract
Aims: Evaluate safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK) and target engagement (TE) of losmapimod in blood and muscle in facioscapulohumeral dystrophy (FSHD). Methods: This study included Part A: 10 healthy volunteers randomized to single oral doses of losmapimod (7.5 mg then 15 mg; n = 8) or placebo (both periods; n = 2); Part B: 15 FSHD subjects randomized to placebo (n = 3), or losmapimod 7.5 mg (n = 6) or 15 mg (n = 6); and Part C: FSHD subjects received open‐label losmapimod 15 mg (n = 5) twice daily for 14 days. Biopsies were performed in FSHD subjects at baseline and Day 14 in magnetic resonance imaging‐normal appearing (Part B) and affected muscle identified by abnormal short‐tau inversion recovery sequence + (Part C). PK and TE, based on pHSP27:total HSP27, were assessed in muscle and sorbitol‐stimulated blood. Results: PK profiles were similar between healthy volunteers and FSHD subjects, with mean Cmax and AUC0–12 for 15 mg in FSHD subjects (Part B) of 85.0 ± 16.7 ng*h/mL and 410 ± 50.3 ng*h/mL, respectively. Part B and Part C PK results were similar, and 7.5 mg results were approximately dose proportional to 15 mg results. Dose‐dependent concentrations in muscle (42.1 ± 10.5 ng/g [7.5 mg] to 97.2 ± 22.4 ng/g [15 mg]) were observed, with plasma‐to‐muscle ratio from ~0.67 to ~1 at estimated tmax of 3.5 hours postdose. TE was observed in blood and muscle. Adverse events (AEs) were mild and self‐limited. Conclusion: Losmapimod was well tolerated, with no serious AEs. Dose‐dependent PK and TE were observed. This study supports advancing losmapimod into Phase 2 trials in FSHD. Clinical Trial Registration: Clinical trial identifier ToetsingOnline: NL68539.056.18 Nederlands Trials Register NL8000. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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16. Biperiden Challenge Model in Healthy Elderly as Proof‐of‐Pharmacology Tool: A Randomized, Placebo‐Controlled Trial.
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Bakker, Charlotte, van Esdonk, Michiel J., Stuurman, Rik. E., Borghans, Laura G.J.M., de Kam, Marieke L., van Gerven, Joop M.A., and Groeneveld, Geert Jan
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MEMORY , *DRUG tolerance , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *PHARMACOLOGY , *CELL receptors , *COGNITION , *TASK performance , *ACETYLCHOLINE , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DOSE-effect relationship in pharmacology , *STATISTICAL sampling , *CROSSOVER trials , *REACTION time , *MUSCARINIC antagonists , *NEURODEGENERATION , *PHARMACODYNAMICS , *OLD age - Abstract
Selective M1 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAChR) agonists are being developed as symptomatic treatment for neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric disorders that lead to cognitive dysfunction. Demonstrating cognition‐enhancing effects in early‐phase clinical development in healthy subjects is difficult. A challenge with the M1 mAChR antagonist biperiden could be used to demonstrate procognitive and pharmacological effects of selective M1 mAChR agonists. The aim of this study was to develop such a model. To this end, 12 healthy elderly subjects participated in a randomized, placebo‐controlled, 3‐way crossover study investigating tolerability, pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacodynamic (PD) effects of 2 and 4 mg biperiden. Repeated PD assessments were performed using neurocognitive tasks and electrophysiological measurements. A population PK‐PD model was developed. Four milligrams of biperiden showed significant impairment of sustained attention (−2.1 percentage point in adaptive tracking [95%CI, −3.043 to −1.148], verbal memory (2‐3 fewer words recalled [95%CI, −5.9 to −0.2]) and working memory (up to a 50‐millisecond increase in the n‐back task reaction time [95%CI, 21.854‐77.882]) compared with placebo. The PK data were best fitted by a 2‐compartment model and showed high interoccasion and intersubject variability. Population PK‐PD analysis quantified significant concentration‐effect relationships for the n‐back reaction time, n‐back accuracy, and adaptive tracking. In conclusion, biperiden caused M1 mAChR‐related dose‐ and concentration‐dependent temporary declines in cognitive functioning. Therefore a biperiden pharmacological challenge model can be used for proof‐of‐pharmacology studies and to demonstrate cognition‐enhancing effects of new cholinergic compounds that are being developed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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17. Accelerating vaccine trial conduct in a pandemic with a hot spot‐based inclusion strategy using trial and epidemic simulation.
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van der Plas, Johan L., van Esdonk, Michiel J., Kamerling, Ingrid M. C., and Cohen, Adam F.
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VACCINE trials , *PANDEMICS , *VACCINE effectiveness , *VACCINE development , *EPIDEMICS - Abstract
Clinical development of vaccines in a pandemic situation should be rigorous but expedited to tackle the pandemic threat as fast as possible. We explored the effects of a novel vaccine trial strategy that actively identifies and enrolls subjects in local areas with high infection rates. In addition, we assessed the practical requirements needed for such a strategy. Clinical trial simulations were used to assess the effects of utilizing these so‐called "hot spot strategy" compared to a traditional vaccine field trial. We used preset parameters of a pandemic outbreak and incorporated realistic aspects of conducting a trial in a pandemic setting. Our simulations demonstrated that incorporating a hot spot strategy shortened the duration of the vaccine trial considerably, even if only one hot spot was identified during the clinical trial. The active hot spot strategy described in this paper has clear advantages compared to a "wait‐and‐see" approach that is used in traditional vaccine efficacy trials. Completion of a clinical trial can be expedited by adapting to resurgences and outbreaks that will occur in a population during a pandemic. However, this approach requires a speed of response that is unusual for a traditional phase III clinical trial. Therefore, several recommendations are made to help accomplish rapid clinical trial setup in areas identified as local outbreaks. The described model and hot spot vaccination strategy can be adjusted to disease‐specific transmission characteristics and could therefore be applied to any future pandemic threat. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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18. An exploratory first-in-man study to investigate the pharmacokinetics and safety of liposomal dexamethasone at a 2- and 1-week interval in patients with metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer.
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Vrouwe, Josephina P. M., Kamerling, Ingrid M. C., van Esdonk, Michiel J., Metselaar, Josbert M., Stuurman, Frederik E., der Pluijm, Gabri van, Burggraaf, Jacobus, and Osanto, Susanne
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CASTRATION-resistant prostate cancer ,ANDROGEN receptors ,LIPOSOMES ,COMPUTED tomography ,DEXAMETHASONE - Abstract
Dexamethasone has antitumor activity in metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). We aimed to investigate intravenous liposome-encapsulated dexamethasone disodium phosphate (liposomal dexamethasone) administration in mCRPC patients. In this exploratory first-in-man study, patients in part A received a starting dose of 10 mg followed by five doses of 20 mg liposomal dexamethasone at 2-week intervals. Upon review of part A safety, patients in part B received 10 weekly doses of 18.5 mg. Primary outcomes were safety and pharmacokinetic profile, secondary outcome was antitumor efficacy. Nine mCRPC patients (5 part A, 4 part B) were enrolled. All patients experienced grade 1–2 toxicity, one (part B) patient experienced grade 3 toxicity (permanent bladder catheter-related urosepsis). No infusion-related adverse events occurred. One patient had upsloping glucose levels ≤9.1 mmol/L. Trough plasma concentrations of liposomal- and free dexamethasone were below the lower limit of quantification (LLOQ) in part A, and above LLOQ in three patients in part B (t1/2 ~50 h for liposomal dexamethasone), trough concentrations of liposomal- and free dexamethasone increased toward the end of the study. In seven of nine patients (78%) patients, stable disease was observed in bone and/or CT scans at follow-up, and in one (part B) of these seven patients a >50% PSA biochemical response was observed. Bi- and once weekly administrations of IV liposomal dexamethasone were well-tolerated. Weekly dosing enabled trough concentrations of liposomal- and free dexamethasone >LLOQ. The data presented support further clinical investigation in well-powered studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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19. Theoretical Performance of Nonlinear Mixed-Effect Models Incorporating Saliva as an Alternative Sampling Matrix for Therapeutic Drug Monitoring in Pediatrics: A Simulation Study.
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Kruizinga, Matthijs D., Stuurman, Frederik E., Driessen, Gertjan J. A., Cohen, Adam F., Bergmann, Kirsten R., and van Esdonk, Michiel J.
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- 2021
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20. A novel sustained-release cysteamine bitartrate formulation for the treatment of cystinosis: Pharmacokinetics and safety in healthy male volunteers.
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Berends, Cécile L., Pagan, Lisa, van Esdonk, Michiel J., Klarenbeek, Naomi B., Bergmann, Kirsten R., Moerland, Matthijs, der Wel, Vincent van, de Visser, Saco J., Büller, Hans, Loos, Frans de, de Vries, Wouter S., Waals, Hans, de Leede, Leo G. J., Burggraaf, Jacobus, and Kamerling, Ingrid M. C.
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CYSTEAMINE ,PHARMACOKINETICS ,LEUCOCYTES ,PATIENT compliance ,VOLUNTEERS - Abstract
The strict intake regimen of cysteamine bitartrate formulations, associated with side effects, is a concern for the treatment compliance in cystinosis therapy. Therefore, there is a need for a cysteamine formulation with an improved pharmacokinetic profile. This study investigated the pharmacokinetics, safety and tolerability of a new sustained-release cysteamine dosage form, PO-001, in healthy volunteers. This was a randomized, investigator-blinded, three-way cross-over study to compare single doses (600 mg) of PO-001 with Cystagon® (immediate-release) and Procysbi® (delayed-release). Collected blood samples were analyzed for plasma cysteamine concentrations and pharmacokinetic parameters were estimated by noncompartmental analysis. In addition, plasma cysteamine concentrations were analyzed using a population pharmacokinetic approach using NONMEM®. Pharmacokinetics showed clear sustained-release characteristics of PO-001 over time with a lower C
max and longer Tmax compared to Cystagon® and Procysbi®. All treatment-emergent adverse events were of mild severity, with the exception of two subjects who reported moderate severity gastrointestinal problems including vomiting and diarrhea, which were related to Cystagon® intake. Population PK simulations showed a favourable PK profile based on Cmax and Ctrough concentrations at steady state. In conclusion, a single dose of 600 mg PO-001 was well tolerated with no findings of clinical concern. This new cysteamine bitartrate formulation showed pharmacokinetics of a sustained-release formulation, which may be beneficial for the treatment of cystinosis patients. This study supports advancing this type of sustained-release formulation into a subsequent study to confirm reduced dosing frequency with efficient control of white blood cells (WBCs) cystine levels. Netherlands Trial Registry (NTR) (NL67638.056.18). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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21. Correction: Wind et al. Topical Bimiralisib Shows Meaningful Cutaneous Drug Levels in Healthy Volunteers and Mycosis Fungoides Patients but No Clinical Activity in a First-in-Human, Randomized Controlled Trial. Cancers 2022, 14 , 1510.
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Wind, Selinde S., Jansen, Manon A. A., Rijsbergen, Melanie, van Esdonk, Michiel J., Ziagkos, Dimitrios, Cheng, Wing C., Niemeyer-van der Kolk, Tessa, Korsten, John, Gruszka, Agnieszka, Schmitz-Rohmer, Debora, Bonnel, David, Legouffe, Raphael, Barré, Florian, Bekkenk, Marcel W., de Haas, Ellen R. M., Quint, Koen D., Schnidar, Harald, Rolli, Melanie, Streefkerk, Henk Johan, and Burggraaf, Jacobus
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DRUG efficacy ,MYCOSIS fungoides ,MTOR inhibitors ,CUTANEOUS T-cell lymphoma - Published
- 2023
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22. Population Pharmacokinetic/Pharmacodynamic Analysis of Nociceptive Pain Models Following an Oral Pregabalin Dose Administration to Healthy Subjects.
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van Esdonk, Michiel J., Lindeman, Ian, Okkerse, Pieter, de Kam, Marieke L., Groeneveld, Geert J., and Stevens, Jasper
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PHARMACOKINETICS , *PHARMACODYNAMICS , *NOCICEPTIVE pain , *PREGABALIN , *ORAL drug administration , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
A battery of pain models can be used in clinical trials to investigate the efficacy and to establish the concentration‐effect relationship of novel analgesics. This study quantified the pharmacokinetics (PK) of pregabalin after a single oral dose of 300 mg and the pharmacodynamics (PD) on the pain tolerance threshold (PTT) of the cold pressor, electrical stimulation, the pressure pain model, and on the pain detection threshold of a contact heat pain model. The PK were best described using a one‐compartment model with lag time, linear absorption, and linear elimination. The PTT of the cold pressor showed a negative linear decrease over time without pregabalin. A linear drug effect was identified on the PTT of the cold pressor test and an on/off effect for the electrical stimulation PTT. No PK/PD relationship could be identified on the pressure pain and heat pain test. Citation: [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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23. The Oral Pheneticillin Absorption Test: An Accurate Method to Identify Patients with Inadequate Oral Pheneticillin Absorption.
- Author
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Dijkmans, Anneke C., Kweekel, Dinemarie M., van Dissel, Jaap T., van Esdonk, Michiel J., Kamerling, Ingrid M. C., and Burggraaf, Jacobus
- Subjects
TEST methods ,STREPTOCOCCAL diseases ,ABSORPTION ,INTRAVENOUS therapy ,ORAL examinations (Education) - Abstract
Severe streptococcal infections are commonly treated with intravenous followed by oral penicillin (pheneticillin) therapy. However, switching from iv to oral therapy is complicated by the variability in oral pheneticillin absorption. We employed an Oral Absorption Test (OAT) for pheneticillin to identify patients in whom oral pheneticillin absorption is poor. Out of 84 patients 30 patients (36%) were identified as insufficient absorbers. Treatment failure due to pheneticillin malabsorption can be avoided by performing an OAT, and these patients should be treated by another antibiotic, which is known to be absorbed well. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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24. Safety, Pharmacokinetics, and Pharmacodynamics of a First-in-Class ClC-1 Inhibitor to Enhance Muscle Excitability: Phase I Randomized Controlled Trial.
- Author
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Ruijs TQ, de Cuba CMKE, Heuberger JAAC, Hutchison J, Bold J, Grønnebæk TS, Jensen KG, Chin E, Quiroz JA, Petersen TK, Flagstad P, de Kam ML, van Esdonk MJ, Klaassen E, Doll RJ, Koopmans IW, de Goede AA, Aulin LBS, Pedersen TH, and Groeneveld GJ
- Abstract
NMD670 is a first-in-class inhibitor of skeletal muscle-specific chloride channel ClC-1, developed to improve muscle weakness and fatigue in neuromuscular diseases. Preclinical studies show that ClC-1 inhibition enhances muscle excitability, improving muscle contractility and strength. We describe the first-in-human, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study, which evaluated the safety, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of single and multiple doses of NMD670 in healthy male and female subjects. Single-ascending doses (50-1,600 mg) were administered in a (partial) cross-over design; multiple-ascending doses (200-600 mg q.d.; 400 mg b.i.d.) were administered in a parallel design. Differences in pharmacokinetics between males/females and fed/fasted states were evaluated. Pharmacodynamic effects were evaluated using muscle velocity recovery cycles (MVRC) and analyzed using mixed-effects modeling. NMD670 was generally safe and well-tolerated in healthy subjects, with the only dose-related adverse event being myotonia occurring at the highest dose levels tested (single dose of 1,200, and 1,600 mg). Moreover, NMD670 significantly increased the following MVRC parameters after a single dose of 1,200 mg compared with placebo: early supernormality (estimated difference (ED) 2.04; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.379, 3.70; P = 0.0242); early supernormality after 5 conditioning stimuli (ED 2.51; 95%CI 0.599, 4.41; P = 0.0177); supernormality at 20 ms (ED 2.78; 95%CI 1.377, 4.181; P = 0.0021). Importantly, the results of this study indicate pharmacological target engagement at well-tolerated dose levels in healthy subjects; firstly, because myotonia was an expected exaggerated on-target pharmacological effect, and secondly, because the effects on MVRC indicate increased muscle cell excitability. This study in healthy subjects indicates proof-of-mechanism and provides a solid base for translation to patients with neuromuscular diseases., (© 2024 The Author(s). Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society for Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics.)
- Published
- 2024
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25. A phase 1 trial of AP30663, a K Ca 2 channel inhibitor in development for conversion of atrial fibrillation.
- Author
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Yfanti C, Vestbjerg B, Van't Westende J, Edvardsson N, Monfort LM, Olesen MS, Bentzen BH, Grunnet M, Eveleens Maarse BC, Diness JG, Kemme MJB, Sørensen U, Moerland M, van Esdonk MJ, Klaassen ES, Gal P, and Holst AG
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Double-Blind Method, Electrocardiography, Heart Rate, Injection Site Reaction, Atrial Fibrillation chemically induced, Atrial Fibrillation drug therapy
- Abstract
Aims: AP30663 is a novel compound under development for pharmacological conversion of atrial fibrillation by targeting the small conductance Ca
2+ activated K+ (KCa 2) channel. The aim of this extension phase 1 study was to test AP30663 at higher single doses compared to the first-in-human trial., Methods: Sixteen healthy male volunteers were randomized into 2 cohorts: 6- and 8-mg/kg intravenous single-dose administration of AP30663 vs. placebo. Safety, pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic data were collected., Results: AP30663 was associated with mild and transient infusion site reactions with no clustering of other adverse events but with an estimated maximum mean QTcF interval prolongation of 45.2 ms (95% confidence interval 31.5-58.9) in the 6 mg/kg dose level and 50.4 ms (95% confidence interval 36.7-64.0) with 8 mg/kg. Pharmacokinetics was dose proportional with terminal half-life of around 3 h., Conclusion: AP30663 in doses up to 8 mg/kg was associated with mild and transient infusion site reactions and an increase of the QTcF interval. Supporting Information support that the QTc effect may be explained by an off-target inhibition of the IKr channel., (© 2023 The Authors. British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Pharmacological Society.)- Published
- 2024
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26. Comprehensive evaluation of microneedle-based intradermal adalimumab delivery vs. subcutaneous administration: results of a randomized controlled clinical trial.
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Jacobse J, Ten Voorde W, Tandon A, Romeijn SG, Grievink HW, van der Maaden K, van Esdonk MJ, Moes DJAR, Loeff F, Bloem K, de Vries A, Rispens T, Wolbink G, de Kam M, Ziagkos D, Moerland M, Jiskoot W, Bouwstra J, Burggraaf J, Schrier L, Rissmann R, and Ten Cate R
- Subjects
- Adalimumab, Adult, Humans, Injections, Intradermal, Injections, Subcutaneous, Pain Measurement, Needles, Skin
- Abstract
Aims: To evaluate feasibility of intradermal (i.d.) adalimumab administration using hollow microneedles, and to compare a single i.d. dose of adalimumab using a hollow microneedle with a single subcutaneous (s.c.) dose using a conventional needle., Methods: In this single-centre double-blind, placebo-controlled, double-dummy clinical trial in 24 healthy adults we compared 40 mg adalimumab (0.4 mL) administered i.d. using a hollow microneedle with a s.c. dose using a conventional needle. Primary parameters were pain, acceptability and local tolerability; secondary parameters safety, pharmacokinetics and immunogenicity. We explored usability of optical coherence tomography, clinical photography, thermal imaging, and laser speckle contrast imaging to evaluate skin reaction after i.d. injections. In vitro protein analysis was performed to assess compatibility of adalimumab with the hollow microneedle device., Results: While feasible and safe, injection pain of i.d. adalimumab was higher compared to s.c. adalimumab (35.4 vs. 7.9 on a 100-point visual analogue scale). Initial absorption rate and relative bioavailability were higher after i.d. adalimumab (time to maximum plasma concentration = 95 h [47-120]; F
rel = 129% [6.46%]) compared to s.c. adalimumab (time to maximum plasma concentration = 120 h [96-221]). Anti-adalimumab antibodies were detected in 50% and 83% of the subjects after i.d. and s.c. adalimumab, respectively. We observed statistically significantly more erythema and skin perfusion after i.d. adalimumab, compared to s.c. adalimumab and placebo injections (P < .0001). Cytokine secretion after whole blood lipopolysaccharide challenge was comparable between administration routes., Conclusions: Intradermal injection of adalimumab using hollowing microneedles was perceived as more painful and less accepted than s.c. administration, but yields a higher relative bioavailability with similar safety and pharmacodynamic effects., (© 2021 The Authors. British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Pharmacological Society.)- Published
- 2021
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27. Impact of enantiomer-specific changes in pharmacokinetics between infants and adults on the target concentration of racemic ketorolac: A pooled analysis.
- Author
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Cloesmeijer ME, van Esdonk MJ, Lynn AM, Smits A, Tibboel D, Daali Y, Olkkola KT, Allegaert K, and Mian P
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- Adult, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal, Child, Humans, Infant, Ketorolac Tromethamine, Stereoisomerism, Ketorolac, Pharmaceutical Preparations
- Abstract
Aims: Ketorolac is a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory racemic drug with analgesic effects only attributed to its S-enantiomer. The aim of this study is to quantify enantiomer-specific maturational pharmacokinetics (PK) of ketorolac and investigate if the contribution of both enantiomers to the total ketorolac concentration remains equal between infants and adults or if a change in target racemic concentration should be considered when applied to infants., Methods: Data were pooled from 5 different studies in adults, children and infants, with 1020 plasma concentrations following single intravenous ketorolac administration. An allometry-based enantiomer-specific population PK model was developed with NONMEM 7.3. Simulations were performed in typical adults and infants to investigate differences in S- and R-ketorolac exposure., Results: S- and R-ketorolac PK were best described with a 3- and a 2-compartment model, respectively. The allometry-based PK parameters accounted for changes between populations. No maturation function of ketorolac clearance could be identified. All model parameters were estimated with adequate precision (relative standard error <50%). Single dose simulations showed that a previously established analgesic concentration at half maximal effect in adults of 0.37 mg/L, had a mean S-ketorolac concentration of 0.057 mg/L, but a mean S-ketorolac concentration of 0.046 mg/L in infants. To match the effective adult S-ketorolac-concentration (0.057 mg/L) in typical infants, the EC
50-racemic should be increased to 0.41 mg/L., Conclusion: Enantiomer-specific changes in ketorolac PK yield different concentrations and S- and R-ketorolac ratios between infants and adults at identical racemic concentrations. These PK findings should be considered when studies on maturational pharmacodynamics are considered., (© 2020 The Authors. British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Pharmacological Society.)- Published
- 2021
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28. Safety, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of Gln-1062, a prodrug of galantamine.
- Author
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Bakker C, van der Aart J, Hart EP, Klaassen ES, Bergmann KR, van Esdonk MJ, Kay DG, and Groeneveld GJ
- Abstract
Introduction: Gln-1062 (MEMOGAIN) is an intranasally administered lipophilic prodrug of galantamine. Based on high brain-to-blood concentrations observed in pre-clinical studies, Gln-1062 is expected to have superior cognitive efficacy compared to oral galantamine., Methods: Forty-eight healthy elderly subjects were randomized 12:4 to Gln-1062 (5.5, 11, or 22 mg, b.i.d., for 7 days) or placebo. Safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics were assessed repeatedly. Pharmacokinetics were compared with 16 mg oral galantamine., Results: Gln-1062 up to 22 mg, b.i.d., was well tolerated. Gln-1062 plasma concentrations increased immediately following dosing (median T
max of 0.5 hour [range 0.5-1.0]). Cmax and AUC0-last increased in a dose-linear manner over all three dose levels. Gln-1062 was rapidly cleaved into galantamine. Gln-1062 significantly improved adaptive tracking (sustained attention) with 1.95% (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.630-3.279, P = 0.0055) compared to placebo after correction for individual baseline performance., Discussion: Gln-1062 was considered to be safe and caused fewer gastrointestinal side effects than oral galantamine. Gln-1062 behaved pharmacokinetically as expected and improved performance on cognitive tests., Competing Interests: This study was funded by Neurodyn Life Sciences Inc., now known as Alpha Cognition Inc. D.G. Kay is employee of Alpha Cognition Inc. All other authors report no conflicts of interest., (© 2020 The Authors. Alzheimer's & Dementia: Translational Research & Clinical Interventions published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Alzheimer's Association.)- Published
- 2020
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29. First-in-Human Assessment of cRGD-ZW800-1, a Zwitterionic, Integrin-Targeted, Near-Infrared Fluorescent Peptide in Colon Carcinoma.
- Author
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de Valk KS, Deken MM, Handgraaf HJM, Bhairosingh SS, Bijlstra OD, van Esdonk MJ, Terwisscha van Scheltinga AGT, Valentijn ARPM, March TL, Vuijk J, Peeters KCMJ, Holman FA, Hilling DE, Mieog JSD, Frangioni JV, Burggraaf J, and Vahrmeijer AL
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Animals, Carcinoma pathology, Carcinoma therapy, Chemoradiotherapy, Adjuvant, Colectomy methods, Colon pathology, Colon surgery, Colonic Neoplasms pathology, Colonic Neoplasms therapy, Feasibility Studies, Female, Fluorescent Dyes adverse effects, Fluorescent Dyes chemistry, Fluorescent Dyes pharmacokinetics, Healthy Volunteers, Humans, Integrins metabolism, Male, Mice, Middle Aged, Neoadjuvant Therapy, Optical Imaging adverse effects, Peptides, Cyclic administration & dosage, Peptides, Cyclic adverse effects, Peptides, Cyclic chemistry, Peptides, Cyclic pharmacokinetics, Quaternary Ammonium Compounds administration & dosage, Quaternary Ammonium Compounds adverse effects, Quaternary Ammonium Compounds chemistry, Quaternary Ammonium Compounds pharmacokinetics, Rats, Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared methods, Sulfonic Acids administration & dosage, Sulfonic Acids adverse effects, Sulfonic Acids chemistry, Sulfonic Acids pharmacokinetics, Toxicity Tests, Acute, Carcinoma diagnosis, Colon diagnostic imaging, Colonic Neoplasms diagnosis, Fluorescent Dyes administration & dosage, Optical Imaging methods
- Abstract
Purpose: Incomplete oncologic resections and damage to vital structures during colorectal cancer surgery increases morbidity and mortality. Moreover, neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy has become the standard treatment modality for locally advanced rectal cancer, where subsequent downstaging can make identification of the primary tumor more challenging during surgery. Near-infrared (NIR) fluorescence imaging can aid surgeons by providing real-time visualization of tumors and vital structures during surgery., Experimental Design: We present the first-in-human clinical experience of a novel NIR fluorescent peptide, cRGD-ZW800-1, for the detection of colon cancer. cRGD-ZW800-1 was engineered to have an overall zwitterionic chemical structure and neutral charge to lower nonspecific uptake and thus background fluorescent signal. We performed a phase I study in 11 healthy volunteer as well as a phase II feasibility study in 12 patients undergoing an elective colon resection, assessing 0.005, 0.015, and 0.05 mg/kg cRGD-ZW800-1 for the intraoperative visualization of colon cancer., Results: cRGD-ZW800-1 appears safe, and exhibited rapid elimination into urine after a single low intravenous dose. Minimal invasive intraoperative visualization of colon cancer through full-thickness bowel wall was possible after an intravenous bolus injection of 0.05 mg/kg at least 2 hours prior to surgery. Longer intervals between injection and imaging improved the tumor-to-background ratio., Conclusions: cRGD-ZW800-1 enabled fluorescence imaging of colon cancer in both open and minimal invasive surgeries. Further development of cRGD-ZW800-1 for widespread use in cancer surgery may be warranted given the ubiquitous overexpression of various integrins on different types of tumors and their vasculature., (©2020 American Association for Cancer Research.)
- Published
- 2020
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30. Model informed quantification of the feed-forward stimulation of growth hormone by growth hormone-releasing hormone.
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van Esdonk MJ, Burggraaf J, van der Graaf PH, and Stevens J
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- Female, Growth Hormone, Humans, Recombinant Proteins, Growth Hormone-Releasing Hormone, Human Growth Hormone
- Abstract
Aims: Growth hormone (GH) secretion is pulsatile and secretion varies highly between individuals. To understand and ultimately predict GH secretion, it is important to first delineate and quantify the interaction and variability in the biological processes underlying stimulated GH secretion. This study reports on the development of a population nonlinear mixed effects model for GH stimulation, incorporating individual GH kinetics and the stimulation of GH by GH-releasing hormone (GHRH)., Methods: Literature data on the systemic circulation, the median eminence, and the anterior pituitary were included as system parameters in the model. Population parameters were estimated on data from 8 healthy normal weight and 16 obese women who received a 33 μg recombinant human GH dose. The next day, a bolus injection of 100 μg GHRH was given to stimulate GH secretion., Results: The GH kinetics were best described with the addition of 2 distribution compartments with a bodyweight dependent clearance (increasing linearly from 24.7 L/h for a 60-kg subject to 32.1 L/h for a 100-kg subject). The model described the data adequately with high parameter precision and significant interindividual variability on the GH clearance and distribution volume. Additionally, high variability in the amount of secreted GH, driven by GHRH receptor activation, was identified (coefficient of variation = 90%)., Conclusion: The stimulation of GH by GHRH was quantified and significant interindividual variability was identified on multiple parameters. This model sets the stage for further development of by inclusion of additional physiological components to quantify GH secretion in humans., (© 2020 The Authors. British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Pharmacological Society.)
- Published
- 2020
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31. Pharmacokinetics of intravenous and inhaled salbutamol and tobramycin: An exploratory study to investigate the potential of exhaled breath condensate as a matrix for pharmacokinetic analysis.
- Author
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Kruizinga MD, Birkhoff WAJ, van Esdonk MJ, Klarenbeek NB, Cholewinski T, Nelemans T, Dröge MJ, Cohen AF, and Zuiker RGJA
- Subjects
- Administration, Intravenous, Biomarkers, Breath Tests, Cross-Over Studies, Humans, Albuterol, Tobramycin
- Abstract
Concentrations of drugs acting in the lungs are difficult to measure, resulting in relatively unknown local pharmacokinetics. The aim of this study is to assess the potential of exhaled breath condensate (EBC) as a matrix for pharmacokinetic analysis of inhaled and intravenous medication. A 4-way crossover study was conducted in 12 volunteers with tobramycin and salbutamol intravenously and via inhalation. EBC and plasma samples were collected postdose and analysed for drug concentrations. Sample dilution, calculated using urea concentrations, was used to estimate the epithelial lining fluid concentration. Salbutamol and tobramycin were largely undetectable in EBC after intravenous administration and were detectable after inhaled administration in all subjects in 50.8 and 51.5% of EBC samples, respectively. Correction of EBC concentrations for sample dilution did not explain the high variability. This high variability of EBC drug concentrations seems to preclude EBC as a matrix for pharmacokinetic analysis of tobramycin and salbutamol., (© 2019 The Authors. British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Pharmacological Society.)
- Published
- 2020
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32. A Novel Somatostatin-Dopamine Chimera (BIM23B065) Reduced GH Secretion in a First-in-Human Clinical Trial.
- Author
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de Boon WMI, van Esdonk MJ, Stuurman FE, Biermasz NR, Pons L, Paty I, and Burggraaf J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Dopamine adverse effects, Dopamine analogs & derivatives, Dopamine pharmacokinetics, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Double-Blind Method, Healthy Volunteers, Hormone Antagonists adverse effects, Hormone Antagonists pharmacokinetics, Human Growth Hormone blood, Human Growth Hormone metabolism, Humans, Injections, Subcutaneous, Insulin-Like Growth Factor I analysis, Male, Middle Aged, Pituitary Gland metabolism, Pituitary Neoplasms drug therapy, Prolactin blood, Somatostatin adverse effects, Somatostatin analogs & derivatives, Somatostatin pharmacokinetics, Young Adult, Dopamine administration & dosage, Hormone Antagonists administration & dosage, Human Growth Hormone antagonists & inhibitors, Pituitary Gland drug effects, Somatostatin administration & dosage
- Abstract
Context: A somatostatin-dopamine chimera (BIM23B065) was under investigation to reduce GH secretion for the treatment of pituitary adenomas., Objective: To determine pharmacokinetics, safety, and tolerability and to monitor hormonal changes after single and multiple subcutaneous BIM23B065 administrations., Design: Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group design with five single and three 13-day multiple ascending-dose cohorts., Patients: A total of 63 healthy male white volunteers were enrolled (47 active, 16 placebo)., Main Outcome Measures: Pharmacokinetics, GH, prolactin (PRL), IGF-1, GH after GHRH administration, and general clinical safety criteria., Results: The maximum dosage of BIM23B065 administered in this study was 1.5 mg. BIM23B065 reduced the mean GH concentrations after 8 and 13 days of treatment. A decrease in GH release after GHRH administration indicated inhibition of the hypothalamic-pituitary-somatotropic axis. IGF-1 was not altered after single doses but showed a significant change from baseline after multiple dosing. PRL secretion was reduced in all subjects who were treated. Orthostatic hypotension and injection site reactions were commonly observed at high dosages. A 6-day uptitration period was included to successfully lower the cardiovascular effects in the multiple ascending dose part of the study., Conclusions: Proof of pharmacology of BIM23B065 was shown by a reduction in GH, IGF-1, and PRL concentrations in healthy male volunteers, supporting activity of the somatostatin analog and dopamine agonist moieties. The safety and tolerability of the higher dosing regions was limited mainly by orthostatic hypotension.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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