Pharmacokinetics and dialytic clearance of apixaban during in vitro continuous renal replacement therapy

Abstract Background To evaluate the transmembrane clearance (CLTM) of apixaban during modeled in vitro continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT), assess protein binding and circuit adsorption, and provide initial dosing recommendations. Methods Apixaban was added to the CRRT circuit and serial pre...

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Main Authors: Lauren Andrews, Scott Benken, Xing Tan, Eric Wenzler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-01-01
Series:BMC Nephrology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12882-021-02248-7
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spelling doaj-5354b0df78d14dc7bac24491c947526b2021-01-31T16:37:12ZengBMCBMC Nephrology1471-23692021-01-0122111210.1186/s12882-021-02248-7Pharmacokinetics and dialytic clearance of apixaban during in vitro continuous renal replacement therapyLauren Andrews0Scott Benken1Xing Tan2Eric Wenzler3College of Pharmacy, University of Illinois at ChicagoCollege of Pharmacy, University of Illinois at ChicagoCollege of Pharmacy, University of Illinois at ChicagoCollege of Pharmacy, University of Illinois at ChicagoAbstract Background To evaluate the transmembrane clearance (CLTM) of apixaban during modeled in vitro continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT), assess protein binding and circuit adsorption, and provide initial dosing recommendations. Methods Apixaban was added to the CRRT circuit and serial pre-filter bovine blood samples were collected along with post-filter blood and effluent samples. All experiments were performed in duplicate using continuous veno-venous hemofiltration (CVVH) and hemodialysis (CVVHD) modes, with varying filter types, flow rates, and point of CVVH replacement fluid dilution. Concentrations of apixaban and urea were quantified via liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Plasma pharmacokinetic parameters for apixaban were estimated via noncompartmental analysis. CLTM was calculated via the estimated area under the curve (AUC) and by the product of the sieving/saturation coefficient (SC/SA) and flow rate. Two and three-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) models were built to assess the effects of mode, filter type, flow rate, and point of dilution on CLTM by each method. Optimal doses were suggested by matching the AUC observed in vitro to the systemic exposure demonstrated in Phase 2/3 studies of apixaban. Linear regression was utilized to provide dosing estimations for flow rates from 0.5–5 L/h. Results Mean adsorption to the HF1400 and M150 filters differed significantly at 38 and 13%, respectively, while mean (± standard deviation, SD) percent protein binding was 70.81 ± 0.01%. Effect of CVVH point of dilution did not differ across filter types, although CLTM was consistently significantly higher during CRRT with the HF1400 filter compared to the M150. The three-way ANOVA demonstrated improved fit when CLTM values calculated by AUC were used (adjusted R2 0.87 vs. 0.52), and therefore, these values were used to generate optimal dosing recommendations. Linear regression revealed significant effects of filter type and flow rate on CLTM by AUC, suggesting doses of 2.5–7.5 mg twice daily (BID) may be needed for flow rates ranging from 0.5–5 L/h, respectively. Conclusion For CRRT flow rates most commonly employed in clinical practice, the standard labeled 5 mg BID dose of apixaban is predicted to achieve target systemic exposure thresholds. The safety and efficacy of these proposed dosing regimens warrants further investigation in clinical studies.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12882-021-02248-7ApixabanPharmacokineticsDialysisRenal replacement therapySieving coefficientSaturation coefficient
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lauren Andrews
Scott Benken
Xing Tan
Eric Wenzler
spellingShingle Lauren Andrews
Scott Benken
Xing Tan
Eric Wenzler
Pharmacokinetics and dialytic clearance of apixaban during in vitro continuous renal replacement therapy
BMC Nephrology
Apixaban
Pharmacokinetics
Dialysis
Renal replacement therapy
Sieving coefficient
Saturation coefficient
author_facet Lauren Andrews
Scott Benken
Xing Tan
Eric Wenzler
author_sort Lauren Andrews
title Pharmacokinetics and dialytic clearance of apixaban during in vitro continuous renal replacement therapy
title_short Pharmacokinetics and dialytic clearance of apixaban during in vitro continuous renal replacement therapy
title_full Pharmacokinetics and dialytic clearance of apixaban during in vitro continuous renal replacement therapy
title_fullStr Pharmacokinetics and dialytic clearance of apixaban during in vitro continuous renal replacement therapy
title_full_unstemmed Pharmacokinetics and dialytic clearance of apixaban during in vitro continuous renal replacement therapy
title_sort pharmacokinetics and dialytic clearance of apixaban during in vitro continuous renal replacement therapy
publisher BMC
series BMC Nephrology
issn 1471-2369
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Abstract Background To evaluate the transmembrane clearance (CLTM) of apixaban during modeled in vitro continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT), assess protein binding and circuit adsorption, and provide initial dosing recommendations. Methods Apixaban was added to the CRRT circuit and serial pre-filter bovine blood samples were collected along with post-filter blood and effluent samples. All experiments were performed in duplicate using continuous veno-venous hemofiltration (CVVH) and hemodialysis (CVVHD) modes, with varying filter types, flow rates, and point of CVVH replacement fluid dilution. Concentrations of apixaban and urea were quantified via liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Plasma pharmacokinetic parameters for apixaban were estimated via noncompartmental analysis. CLTM was calculated via the estimated area under the curve (AUC) and by the product of the sieving/saturation coefficient (SC/SA) and flow rate. Two and three-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) models were built to assess the effects of mode, filter type, flow rate, and point of dilution on CLTM by each method. Optimal doses were suggested by matching the AUC observed in vitro to the systemic exposure demonstrated in Phase 2/3 studies of apixaban. Linear regression was utilized to provide dosing estimations for flow rates from 0.5–5 L/h. Results Mean adsorption to the HF1400 and M150 filters differed significantly at 38 and 13%, respectively, while mean (± standard deviation, SD) percent protein binding was 70.81 ± 0.01%. Effect of CVVH point of dilution did not differ across filter types, although CLTM was consistently significantly higher during CRRT with the HF1400 filter compared to the M150. The three-way ANOVA demonstrated improved fit when CLTM values calculated by AUC were used (adjusted R2 0.87 vs. 0.52), and therefore, these values were used to generate optimal dosing recommendations. Linear regression revealed significant effects of filter type and flow rate on CLTM by AUC, suggesting doses of 2.5–7.5 mg twice daily (BID) may be needed for flow rates ranging from 0.5–5 L/h, respectively. Conclusion For CRRT flow rates most commonly employed in clinical practice, the standard labeled 5 mg BID dose of apixaban is predicted to achieve target systemic exposure thresholds. The safety and efficacy of these proposed dosing regimens warrants further investigation in clinical studies.
topic Apixaban
Pharmacokinetics
Dialysis
Renal replacement therapy
Sieving coefficient
Saturation coefficient
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12882-021-02248-7
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