Volume 48, Issue 6 p. 681-695

Population Pharmacokinetics of Infliximab in Patients With Ankylosing Spondylitis

Zhenhua Xu PhD, FCP

Zhenhua Xu PhD, FCP

Centocor Research and Development, Inc., Malvern, Pennsylvania

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Kathleen Seitz PhD

Kathleen Seitz PhD

Centocor Research and Development, Inc., Malvern, Pennsylvania

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Adedigbo Fasanmade PhD

Adedigbo Fasanmade PhD

Centocor Research and Development, Inc., Malvern, Pennsylvania

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Joyce Ford BS

Joyce Ford BS

Centocor Research and Development, Inc., Malvern, Pennsylvania

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Paul Williamson MD

Paul Williamson MD

Centocor Research and Development, Inc., Malvern, Pennsylvania

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Weichun Xu PhD

Weichun Xu PhD

Centocor Research and Development, Inc., Malvern, Pennsylvania

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Hugh M. Davis PhD

Hugh M. Davis PhD

Centocor Research and Development, Inc., Malvern, Pennsylvania

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Honghui Zhou PhD, FCP

Corresponding Author

Honghui Zhou PhD, FCP

Centocor Research and Development, Inc., Malvern, Pennsylvania

Address for correspondence: Honghui Zhou, PhD, FCP, Pharmacokinetics, Modeling & Simulation, Clinical Pharmacology Sciences, Centocor Research and Development, Inc., 200 Great Valley Parkway, Malvern, PA 19355; e-mail: [email protected].Search for more papers by this author
First published: 07 March 2013
Citations: 86

Abstract

The population pharmacokinetics of infliximab were characterized in patients with active ankylosing spondylitis (n =274). Serum infliximab concentration data, from a 2-year period, were analyzed using NONMEM. A 2-compartment linear pharmacokinetic model was chosen to describe the pharmacokinetic characteristics of infliximab in serum. Population estimates (typical value ± standard error) were obtained from the final covariate model: clearance (CL: 0.273 ± 0.007 L/day), volume of distribution in the central compartment (V1: 3.06 ± 0.057 L), intercompartment clearance (Q: 1.72 ± 0.48 L/day), and volume of distribution in the peripheral compartment (V2:2.94 ± 0.17 L). Interindividual variability for CL and V1 was 34.1% and 17.5%, respectively. White blood cell count at baseline and the antibody-to-infliximab status were significant covariates to CL; body surface area and sex were significant covariates to V1. The CL for patients with a positive antibody-to-infliximab status was estimated to be 41.9% to 76.7% higher than for the remaining patients. Other covariates (baseline disease activity and the concomitant medication use of prednisolone, omeprazole, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, or analgesics) did not affect infliximab pharmacokinetics. The development of antibodies to infliximab was associated with accelerated infliximab clearance and may represent a potential underlying mechanism for an inadequate response, or loss of response, to infliximab treatment.