Use of population pharmacokinetic‐pharmacodynamic modelling to inform antimalarial dose optimization in infants

Author:

Banda Clifford G.123ORCID,Tarning Joel45ORCID,Barnes Karen I.26ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Malawi‐Liverpool‐Wellcome Programme Blantyre Malawi

2. Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Department of Medicine University of Cape Town Cape Town South Africa

3. Kamuzu University of Health Sciences (formerly College of Medicine and Kamuzu College of Nursing, University of Malawi) Blantyre Malawi

4. Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health, Nuffield Department of Medicine University of Oxford Oxford UK

5. Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit, Faculty of Tropical Medicine Mahidol University Bangkok Thailand

6. WorldWide Antimalarial Resistance Network (WWARN), Pharmacology Scientific Group University of Cape Town Cape Town South Africa

Abstract

Infants bear a significant malaria burden but are usually excluded from participating in early dose optimization studies that inform dosing regimens of antimalarial therapy. Unlike older children, infants' exclusion from early‐phase trials has resulted in limited evidence to guide accurate dosing of antimalarial treatment for uncomplicated malaria or malaria‐preventive treatment in this vulnerable population. Subsequently, doses used in infants are often extrapolated from older children or adults, with the potential for under‐ or overdosing. Population pharmacokinetic‐pharmacodynamic (PK‐PD) modelling, a quantitative methodology that applies mathematical and statistical techniques, can aid the design of clinical studies in infants that collect sparse pharmacokinetic data as well as support the analysis of such data to derive optimized antimalarial dosing in this complex and at‐risk yet understudied subpopulation. In this review, we reflect on what PK‐PD modelling can do in programmatic settings of most malaria‐endemic areas and how it can be used to inform antimalarial dose optimization for preventive and curative treatment of uncomplicated malaria in infants. We outline key developmental physiological changes that affect drug exposure in early life, the challenges of conducting dose optimization studies in infants, and examples of how PK‐PD modelling has previously informed antimalarial dose optimization in this subgroup. Additionally, we discuss the limitations and gaps of PK‐PD modelling when used for dose optimization in infants. To utilize modelling well, there is a need to generate useful, sparse, PK and PD data in this subpopulation to inform antimalarial optimal dosing in infancy.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

National Institute for Health and Care Research

Publisher

Wiley

Reference69 articles.

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