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Population pharmacokinetics of sirolimus in kidney transplant patients

  • G. M. Ferron
  • , E. V. Mishina
  • , J. J. Zimmerman
  • , W. J. Jusko
  • SUNY Buffalo

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

104 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective: To characterize the dose-related pharmacokinetics of the immunosuppressant agent sirolimus (formerly rapamycin) in kidney transplant patients by use of two-stage and nonlinear mixed-effect model population methods. Methods: Patients (n = 36) from three centers (Germany, the United Kingdom, and Sweden) who received steady-state oral doses of cyclosporine (ciclosporin) were assessed after single oral administration of sirolimus at doses of 3, 5, 10, and 15 mg/m2. Plasma and whole blood sirolimus samples were analyzed by a high-performance liquid chromatographic/mass spectrophotometric method. Simultaneous fitting used biexponential functions with intercept/slope or clearance/volume terms, as well as first-order absorption (k(a)) and a lag-time. Results: The nonlinear mixed-effect model method (P-Pharm) provided a better characterization of sirolimus kinetics, especially for the absorption and distribution phases where fewer data were available per patient. Sirolimus distribution between whole blood and plasma was concentration-independent, with a mean blood/plasma ratio (coefficient of variation) of 30.9 (48.5%). Elimination was not influenced by dose, as shown by estimates of the terminal half-life of 63 hours (27.5%) and apparent oral blood clearance of 8.9 L/hr (38.2%). Sirolimus distribution parameters were influenced by body weight and surface area. Sirolimus was rapidly absorbed, as shown by the absorption lag-time of 0.27 hour (35.1%), and k(a) of 2.77 hr-1 (48.4%). The concomitant administration of sirolimus and cyclosporine did not reveal any pharmacokinetic interactions. Conclusion: This report provides an initial population pharmacokinetics of sirolimus in kidney transplant recipients receiving cyclosporine concurrently. Sirolimus blood and plasma pharmacokinetics were biexponential and linear for doses from 3 to 15 mg/m2. No pharmacokinetic interaction was found between sirolimus and cyclosporine.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)416-428
Number of pages13
JournalClinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics
Volume61
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 1997

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