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

Author:

Aikawa Naoki1,Okubo Yoshio2,Lynn Melvyn2,Rossignol Daniel P2,Wong Y Nancy3,Schuck Edgar3,Kitahara Yasumi4,Nakano Tomohisa4,Sivak Olena5,Wasan Kishor M5,Nagy Christa2,Yen Mark6

Affiliation:

1. Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, School of Medicine, Keio University, Tokyo, Japan

2. Eisai Inc., Woodcliff Lake, NJ, USA

3. Eisai Inc., Andover, MA, USA

4. Eisai Co., Ltd, Tokyo, Japan

5. Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of British Columbia, Canada

6. California Clinical Trials, Glendale, CA, USA

Abstract

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.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Immunology,Microbiology

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