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Effect of food on the pharmacokinetics of the WEE1 inhibitor adavosertib (AZD1775) in patients with advanced solid tumors

Authors :
Alain Ravaud
Ganesh Mugundu
Liselot Valkenburg-van Iersel
Lone Ottesen
Karen So
Marit A C Vermunt
Fiona C Thistlethwaite
Yan Li
Mariette Labots
Mario Campone
Mats Någård
Patricia Roxburgh
Mei-Lin Ah-See
RS: GROW - R3 - Innovative Cancer Diagnostics & Therapy
MUMC+: MA Medische Oncologie (9)
CCA - Cancer biology and immunology
Medical oncology
Source :
Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology, 86(1), 97-108. Springer Verlag, Någård, M, Ah-See, M-L, So, K, Vermunt, M, Thistlethwaite, F, Labots, M, Roxburgh, P, Ravaud, A, Campone, M, Valkenburg-van Iersel, L, Ottesen, L, Li, Y & Mugundu, G 2020, ' Effect of food on the pharmacokinetics of the WEE1 inhibitor adavosertib (AZD1775) in patients with advanced solid tumors ', Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology, vol. 86, no. 1, pp. 97-108 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s00280-020-04101-4, Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Verlag, 2020.

Abstract

Purpose To support future dosing recommendations, the effect of food on the pharmacokinetics of adavosertib, a first-in-class, small-molecule reversible inhibitor of WEE1 kinase, was assessed in patients with advanced solid tumors. Methods In this Phase I, open-label, randomized, two-period, two-sequence crossover study, the pharmacokinetics of a single 300 mg adavosertib dose were investigated in fed versus fasted states. Results Compared with the fasted state, a high-fat, high-calorie meal (fed state) decreased adavosertib maximum plasma concentration (Cmax) by 16% and systemic exposure (area under the plasma concentration–time curve [AUC]) by 6%; AUC0–t decreased by 7% and time to maximum plasma concentration was delayed by 1.97 h (P = 0.0009). The 90% confidence interval of the geometric least-squares mean treatment ratio for AUC and AUC0–t was contained within the no-effect limits (0.8–1.25), while that of Cmax crossed the lower bound of the no-effect limits. Adverse events (AEs) related to adavosertib treatment were reported by 20 (64.5%) of the 31 patients treated in this study. Grade ≥ 3 AEs were reported by four (12.9%) patients (one in the fed state, three in the fasted state); two of these AEs were considered treatment-related by the investigator. Three serious AEs were reported in three (9.7%) patients; these were not considered treatment-related. No patients discontinued because of treatment-related AEs, and no new safety signals were reported. Conclusion A high-fat meal did not have a clinically relevant effect on the systemic exposure of adavosertib, suggesting that adavosertib can be administered without regard to meals.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03445704
Volume :
86
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....41b79a45c1b4aa90b1e59f2e5e2bf9ed