학술논문

Safety, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of the anti-hepcidin Spiegelmer lexaptepid pegol in healthy subjects.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
British Journal of Pharmacology. May2016, Vol. 173 Issue 10, p1580-1588. 9p. 3 Charts, 6 Graphs.
Subject
*HEPCIDIN
*PHARMACOKINETICS
*MEDICATION safety
*PHARMACODYNAMICS
*IRON deficiency anemia
*DRUG administration
*BIOCHEMISTRY
*CLINICAL trials
*COMPARATIVE studies
*DRUG monitoring
*DOSE-effect relationship in pharmacology
*IRON
*PHENOMENOLOGY
*RESEARCH methodology
*MEDICAL cooperation
*NUCLEOTIDES
*PEPTIDES
*RESEARCH
*TRANSFERRIN
*EVALUATION research
*HUMAN research subjects
*BLIND experiment
*CHEMICAL inhibitors
Language
ISSN
0007-1188
Abstract
Background and Purpose: Anaemia of chronic disease is characterized by impaired erythropoiesis due to functional iron deficiency, often caused by excessive hepcidin. Lexaptepid pegol, a pegylated structured l-oligoribonucleotide, binds and inactivates hepcidin.Experimental Approach: We conducted a placebo-controlled study on the safety, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of lexaptepid after single and repeated i.v. and s.c. administration to 64 healthy subjects at doses from 0.3 to 4.8 mg·kg(-1) .Key Results: After treatment with lexaptepid, serum iron concentration and transferrin increased dose-dependently. Iron increased from approximately 20 μmol·L(-1) at baseline by 67% at 8 h after i.v. infusion of 1.2 mg·kg(-1) lexaptepid. The pharmacokinetics showed dose-proportional increases in peak plasma concentrations and moderately over-proportional increases in systemic exposure. Lexaptepid had no effect on hepcidin production or anti-drug antibodies. Treatment with lexaptepid was generally safe and well tolerated, with mild and transient transaminase increases at doses ≥2.4 mg·kg(-1) and with local injection site reactions after s.c. but not after i.v. administration.Conclusions and Implications: Lexaptepid pegol inhibited hepcidin and dose-dependently raised serum iron and transferrin saturation. The compound is being further developed to treat anaemia of chronic disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]