Pharmacokinetics of oral sitamaquine taken with or without food and safety and efficacy for treatment of visceral leishmaniais: a randomized study in Bihar, India

Sundar, Shyam ; Sinha, Prabhat K. ; Dixon, Susan A. ; Buckley, Renata ; Miller, Ann K. ; Mohamed, Khadeeja ; Al-Banna, Mahir (2011) Pharmacokinetics of oral sitamaquine taken with or without food and safety and efficacy for treatment of visceral leishmaniais: a randomized study in Bihar, India The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 84 (6). pp. 892-900. ISSN 0002-9637

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Official URL: http://www.ajtmh.org/content/84/6/892

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.2011.10-0409

Abstract

This randomized, open-label study of patients in India with visceral leishmaniasis (VL) investigated the effect of food on sitamaquine and desethyl-sitamaquine pharmacokinetics. Patients were randomized to receive oral sitamaquine, 2 mg/kg/day, once a day for 21 days across four cohorts (n = 41) (fasted/fed, fed/fasted, fed/fed, and fasted/fasted) over two periods (days 1-10 and 11-21), or intravenous amphotericin B (AmB), 1 mg/kg every other day for 30 days (n = 20). Mean day 21 pharmacokinetics across the four cohorts were sitamaquine, area under curve (AUC)(0-τ) = 6,627-8,903 ng.hr/mL, AUC(0-16) = 4,859-6,633 ng.hr/mL, maximum plasma concentration (Cmax) = 401-570 ng/mL, apparent terminal half-life (t½) = 18.3-22.8 hr, time to reach Cmax (tmax) = 3.5-6 hr; and desethyl-sitamaquine, AUC(0-τ) = 2,307-3,163 ng.hr/mL, Cmax = 109-154 ng/mL, t½ = 23.0-27.9 hr, tmax = 2-10 hr, with no significant food effect. On-therapy adverse events were observed for sitamaquine in 4 (10%) of 41 patients and for AmB in 17 (85%) of 20 patients. The final clinical cure (day 180) was 85% (95% confidence interval = 70.8-94.4%) for sitamaquine and 95% (95% confidence interval = 75.1-99.9) for AmB. Sitamaquine can be taken regardless of food intake, was generally well tolerated, and showed potential efficacy in patients with visceral leishmaniasis.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.
ID Code:71312
Deposited On:25 Nov 2011 12:53
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