An Industry Survey With Focus on Cardiovascular Safety Pharmacology Study Design and Data Interpretation

Author:

Authier Simon1ORCID,Abernathy Matthew M.2,Correll Krystle3,Chui Ray W.4,Dalton Jill5,Foley C. Michael6,Friedrichs Gregory S.7ORCID,Koerner John E.8,Kallman Mary-Jeanne9,Pannirselvam Malar10,Redfern William S.11,Urmaliya Vijay12,Valentin Jean-Pierre13,Wisialowski Todd14,Zabka Tanja S.15,Pugsley Michael K.16

Affiliation:

1. Charles River, Laval, Canada

2. Lilly Corporate Center, Eli Lilly & Co, Indianapolis, IN, USA

3. Safety Pharmacology Society, Reston, VA, USA

4. Amgen Research, Safety Pharmacology & Animal Research Center, Amgen, Inc, Thousand Oaks, CA, USA

5. Charles River, Mattawan, MI, USA

6. Department of Safety Pharmacology, Integrated Sciences and Technology, AbbVie, North Chicago, IL, USA

7. Novartis, East Hanover, NJ, USA

8. Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, US Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring, MD, USA

9. Kallman Preclinical Consulting, Greenfield, IN, USA

10. Vertex, Cambridge, MA, USA

11. Certara, Sheffield, United Kingdom

12. Global Safety Pharmacology, Janssen Research & Development, Beerse, Belgium

13. Non-Clinical Development, UCB-Biopharma, Belgium

14. Pfizer, Inc, Groton, CT, USA

15. Development Sciences Safety Assessment, Genentech, South San Francisco, CA, USA

16. Toxicology, Cytokinetics, South San Francisco, CA, USA

Abstract

Introduction: The Safety Pharmacology Society (SPS) conducted a membership survey to examine industry practices related mainly to cardiovascular (CV) safety pharmacology (SP). Methods: Questions addressed nonclinical study design, data analysis methods, drug-induced effects, and conventional and novel CV assays. Results: The most frequent therapeutic area targeted by drugs developed by the companies/institutions that employ survey responders was oncology. The most frequently observed drug-mediated effects included an increased heart rate, increased arterial blood pressure, hERG (IKr) block, decreased arterial blood pressure, decreased heart rate, QTc prolongation, and changes in body temperature. Broadly implemented study practices included Latin square crossover study design with n = 4 for nonrodent CV studies, statistical analysis of data (eg, analysis of variance), use of arrhythmia detection software, and the inclusion of data from all study animals when integrating SP studies into toxicology studies. Most responders frequently used individual animal housing conditions. Responders commonly evaluated drug effects on multiple ion channels, but in silico modeling methods were used much less frequently. Most responders rarely measured the J-Tpeak interval in CV studies. Uncertainties relative to Standard for Exchange of Nonclinical Data applications for data derived from CV SP studies were common. Although available, the use of human induced pluripotent stem cell cardiomyocytes remains rare. The respiratory SP study was rarely involved with identifying drug-induced functional issues. Responders indicated that the study-derived no observed effect level was more frequently determined than the no observed adverse effect level in CV SP studies; however, a large proportion of survey responders used neither.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Toxicology

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