Safety, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of four-hour intravenous infusions of eritoran in healthy Japanese and Caucasian men

Eritoran, a synthetic analogue of lipid A, has been shown to bind to TLR4/MD-2 complex and thereby block the interaction of endotoxins with TLR4. We report here the results of a study conducted to assess the single-dose safety and tolerability, as well as the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Innate immunity (London, England) England), 2012-12, Vol.18 (6), p.793-803
Hauptverfasser: Aikawa, Naoki, Okubo, Yoshio, Lynn, Melvyn, Rossignol, Daniel P, Wong, Y Nancy, Schuck, Edgar, Kitahara, Yasumi, Nakano, Tomohisa, Sivak, Olena, Wasan, Kishor M, Nagy, Christa, Yen, Mark
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Eritoran, a synthetic analogue of lipid A, has been shown to bind to TLR4/MD-2 complex and thereby block the interaction of endotoxins with TLR4. We report here the results of a study conducted to assess the single-dose safety and tolerability, as well as the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, of eritoran infusion in Japanese and Caucasian healthy adult men. Sixty-four men (aged 20–45 years; body mass index 18–30 kg/m2) were randomized into four groups: 4-mg total dose (six Japanese and six Caucasian men); 12-mg total dose (12 Japanese and 12 Caucasian men); 28-mg total dose (six Japanese and six Caucasian men); and placebo (eight Japanese and eight Caucasian men). Eritoran in single doses up to 28 mg over 4 h was well tolerated, with no apparent ethnic differences noted. Plasma concentrations were slightly higher in Japanese versus Caucasian men; these differences were not significant after adjustment for differences in body mass (clearance: approximately 1.2 ml/h/kg; volume of distribution at steady state: approximately 0.07 l/kg). The ex vivo endotoxin inhibitory activity of eritoran was similar in Japanese and Caucasian men. The data do not indicate any need for clinical dose adjustment for possible ethnic-based differences in drug distribution or metabolism.
ISSN:1753-4259
1753-4267
DOI:10.1177/1753425912441845