Optimizing circadian drug infusion schedules towards personalized cancer chronotherapy.

Precision medicine requires accurate technologies for drug administration and proper systems pharmacology approaches for patient data analysis. Here, plasma pharmacokinetics (PK) data of the OPTILIV trial in which cancer patients received oxaliplatin, 5-fluorouracil and irinotecan via chronomodulate...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Roger J W Hill, Pasquale F Innominato, Francis Lévi, Annabelle Ballesta
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007218
id doaj-7784ee135eda414fb09d3a891895dd4b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7784ee135eda414fb09d3a891895dd4b2021-04-21T15:13:10ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582020-01-01161e100721810.1371/journal.pcbi.1007218Optimizing circadian drug infusion schedules towards personalized cancer chronotherapy.Roger J W HillPasquale F InnominatoFrancis LéviAnnabelle BallestaPrecision medicine requires accurate technologies for drug administration and proper systems pharmacology approaches for patient data analysis. Here, plasma pharmacokinetics (PK) data of the OPTILIV trial in which cancer patients received oxaliplatin, 5-fluorouracil and irinotecan via chronomodulated schedules delivered by an infusion pump into the hepatic artery were mathematically investigated. A pump-to-patient model was designed in order to accurately represent the drug solution dynamics from the pump to the patient blood. It was connected to semi-mechanistic PK models to analyse inter-patient variability in PK parameters. Large time delays of up to 1h41 between the actual pump start and the time of drug detection in patient blood was predicted by the model and confirmed by PK data. Sudden delivery spike in the patient artery due to glucose rinse after drug administration accounted for up to 10.7% of the total drug dose. New model-guided delivery profiles were designed to precisely lead to the drug exposure intended by clinicians. Next, the complete mathematical framework achieved a very good fit to individual time-concentration PK profiles and concluded that inter-subject differences in PK parameters was the lowest for irinotecan, intermediate for oxaliplatin and the largest for 5-fluorouracil. Clustering patients according to their PK parameter values revealed patient subgroups for each drug in which inter-patient variability was largely decreased compared to that in the total population. This study provides a complete mathematical framework to optimize drug infusion pumps and inform on inter-patient PK variability, a step towards precise and personalized cancer chronotherapy.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007218
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Roger J W Hill
Pasquale F Innominato
Francis Lévi
Annabelle Ballesta
spellingShingle Roger J W Hill
Pasquale F Innominato
Francis Lévi
Annabelle Ballesta
Optimizing circadian drug infusion schedules towards personalized cancer chronotherapy.
PLoS Computational Biology
author_facet Roger J W Hill
Pasquale F Innominato
Francis Lévi
Annabelle Ballesta
author_sort Roger J W Hill
title Optimizing circadian drug infusion schedules towards personalized cancer chronotherapy.
title_short Optimizing circadian drug infusion schedules towards personalized cancer chronotherapy.
title_full Optimizing circadian drug infusion schedules towards personalized cancer chronotherapy.
title_fullStr Optimizing circadian drug infusion schedules towards personalized cancer chronotherapy.
title_full_unstemmed Optimizing circadian drug infusion schedules towards personalized cancer chronotherapy.
title_sort optimizing circadian drug infusion schedules towards personalized cancer chronotherapy.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Computational Biology
issn 1553-734X
1553-7358
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Precision medicine requires accurate technologies for drug administration and proper systems pharmacology approaches for patient data analysis. Here, plasma pharmacokinetics (PK) data of the OPTILIV trial in which cancer patients received oxaliplatin, 5-fluorouracil and irinotecan via chronomodulated schedules delivered by an infusion pump into the hepatic artery were mathematically investigated. A pump-to-patient model was designed in order to accurately represent the drug solution dynamics from the pump to the patient blood. It was connected to semi-mechanistic PK models to analyse inter-patient variability in PK parameters. Large time delays of up to 1h41 between the actual pump start and the time of drug detection in patient blood was predicted by the model and confirmed by PK data. Sudden delivery spike in the patient artery due to glucose rinse after drug administration accounted for up to 10.7% of the total drug dose. New model-guided delivery profiles were designed to precisely lead to the drug exposure intended by clinicians. Next, the complete mathematical framework achieved a very good fit to individual time-concentration PK profiles and concluded that inter-subject differences in PK parameters was the lowest for irinotecan, intermediate for oxaliplatin and the largest for 5-fluorouracil. Clustering patients according to their PK parameter values revealed patient subgroups for each drug in which inter-patient variability was largely decreased compared to that in the total population. This study provides a complete mathematical framework to optimize drug infusion pumps and inform on inter-patient PK variability, a step towards precise and personalized cancer chronotherapy.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007218
work_keys_str_mv AT rogerjwhill optimizingcircadiandruginfusionschedulestowardspersonalizedcancerchronotherapy
AT pasqualefinnominato optimizingcircadiandruginfusionschedulestowardspersonalizedcancerchronotherapy
AT francislevi optimizingcircadiandruginfusionschedulestowardspersonalizedcancerchronotherapy
AT annabelleballesta optimizingcircadiandruginfusionschedulestowardspersonalizedcancerchronotherapy
_version_ 1714667655634354176