학술논문

Remdesivir for COVID-19 in Hospitalized Children: A Phase 2/3 Study.
Document Type
Article
Source
Pediatrics. Mar2024, Vol. 153 Issue 3, p1-11. 21p.
Subject
*DRUG efficacy
*DISEASE progression
*OBESITY
*COVID-19
*ASTHMA
*CLINICAL trials
*SAMPLE size (Statistics)
*CONVALESCENCE
*ANTIVIRAL agents
*CARDIOVASCULAR diseases
*SEVERITY of illness index
*TREATMENT effectiveness
*HOSPITAL care
*RESEARCH funding
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*POLYMERASE chain reaction
*TERMINATION of treatment
*AMINOTRANSFERASES
*PATIENT safety
*METABOLITES
*EVALUATION
*SYMPTOMS
*CHILDREN
Language
ISSN
0031-4005
Abstract
Objectives: Remdesivir decreases the risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection progressing to severe disease in adults. This study evaluated remdesivir safety and pharmacokinetics in infants and children. Methods: This was a phase 2/3, open-label trial in children aged 28 days to 17 years hospitalized for polymerase chain reaction-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection. Participants received for ≤10 days once-daily intravenous remdesivir doses defined using physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling (for ≥40 kg, 200 mg day 1, then 100 mg/day; for age ≥28 days and ≥3 to <40 kg, 5 mg/kg day 1, then 2.5 mg/kg/day). Sparse pharmacokinetic samples were analyzed using population-pharmacokinetic approaches for remdesivir and metabolites GS-704277 and GS-441524. Results: Among 53 participants, at enrollment the median (Q1, Q3) number of days of COVID-19 symptoms was 5 (3, 7) and hospitalization was 1 (1, 3). Underlying conditions included obesity in 19 (37%), asthma in 11 (21%), and cardiac disorders in 11 (21%). Median duration of remdesivir treatment was 5 days (range, 1-10). Remdesivir treatment had no new apparent safety trends. Two participants discontinued treatment because of adverse events including elevated transaminases; both had elevated transaminases at baseline. Three deaths occurred during treatment (and 1 after). When compared with phase 3 adult data, estimated mean pediatric parameters (area under the concentration-time curve over 1 dosing interval, AUCT, Cmax, and CT) were largely overlapping but modestly increased (remdesivir, 33%-129%; GS-704277, 37%-124%; GS-441524, 0%-60%). Recovery occurred for 62% of participants on day 10 and 83% at last assessment. Conclusions: In infants and children with COVID-19, the doses of remdesivir evaluated provided drug exposure similar to adult dosing. In this study with a small sample size, no new safety concerns were observed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]