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Clinical pharmacology of etoposide in children undergoing autologous stem cell transplantation for various solid tumours.

Authors :
Baheti G
McGuire TR
Davda JP
Manouilov KK
Wall D
Gwilt PR
Gordon BB
Source :
Xenobiotica; the fate of foreign compounds in biological systems [Xenobiotica] 2013 Mar; Vol. 43 (3), pp. 276-82. Date of Electronic Publication: 2012 Aug 29.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

1. The population pharmacokinetics of high-dose etoposide was studied in a group of young children and adolescents. 2. Twenty-six children and adolescent were administered high-dose etoposide as a continuous infusion over 24 h. Etoposide plasma concentration-time data was modelled using NONMEM® 7. The effect of age, weight, serum creatinine (SCr), and gender on pharmacokinetic parameters (CL and V(d)) were determined by a nonlinear mixed effect model. 3. The pharmacokinetics of etoposide based on BSA dosing was best described with a 1-compartment structural model which was parameterised in terms of clearance (CL) and volume of distribution (V(d)). An exponential error model was used to explain intersubject variability and a proportional error model was used to describe residual or intrapatient variability. The final model parameter estimates for the typical (normalised to 70 kg) values of CL and V(d) were 2.31 L/hr and 17.5 L, respectively. The CL and V(d) allometrically increased with weight with the power of 3/4 and 1, respectively. After accounting for weight dependence using the allometric scaling, age, serum creatinine, and gender did not have any influence on model parameters. 4. The results of this children and adolescent population pharmacokinetic study indicates that etoposide pharmacokinetics were influenced by body weight on an allometric basis. The pharmacokinetic parameters CL and V(d) increased with increasing weight similar to BSA.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1366-5928
Volume :
43
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Xenobiotica; the fate of foreign compounds in biological systems
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
22931186
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3109/00498254.2012.713530