Characterizing the pharmacological interaction of the antimalarial combination artefenomel-piperaquine in healthy volunteers with induced blood stagePlasmodium falciparum

Author:

Abd-Rahman Azrin N.,Kaschek Daniel,Kümmel Anne,Webster Rebecca,Potter Adam J.,Odedra Anand,Woolley Stephen D,Llewellyn Stacey,Webb LachlanORCID,Marquart Louise,Chalon Stephan,El Gaaloul Myriam,McCarthy James S.,Möhrle Jörg J.,Barber Bridget E.ORCID

Abstract

ABSTRACTBackgroundThe combination antimalarial artefenomel-piperaquine failed to achieve target efficacy in a phase 2b study in Africa and Vietnam. We retrospectively evaluated whether characterizing the pharmacological interaction of this antimalarial combination in a volunteer infection study (VIS) would have enabled prediction of the phase 2b study results.MethodsTwenty-four healthy adults enrolled over three consecutive cohorts were inoculated withPlasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes on day 0. Participants were randomized within each cohort to one of 7 dose combination groups and administered a single oral dose of artefenomel-piperaquine on day 8. Participants received definitive antimalarial treatment with artemether-lumefantrine upon parasite regrowth or on day 42±2. The General Pharmacodynamic Interaction (GPDI) model implemented in the Bliss Independence additivity criterion was developed to characterize the pharmacological interaction between artefenomel and piperaquine. Simulations based on the model were performed to predict the outcomes of the phase 2b combination study.ResultsFor a dose of 800 mg artefenomel administered with 640 mg, 960 mg, or 1440 mg piperaquine, the simulated adequate parasitological response at day 28 (APR28), incorporating actual patient pharmacokinetic (PK) data from the phase 2b trial, was 69.4%, 63.9%, and 74.8%, respectively. These results closely matched the observed APR28in the phase 2b trial of 67.0%, 65.5%, and 75.4% respectively.ConclusionsThese results indicate that VIS offer an efficient means for informing antimalarial combination trials conducted in the field, potentially expediting clinical development.Trial registrationThis study was registered onClinicalTrials.govon 31 May 2018 with registration numberNCT03542149.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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