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Predictors of Systemic Exposure to Topical Crisaborole: A Nonlinear Regression Analysis
Author(s) -
Purohit Vivek,
Riley Steve,
Tan Huaming,
Ports William C.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the journal of clinical pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.92
H-Index - 116
eISSN - 1552-4604
pISSN - 0091-2700
DOI - 10.1002/jcph.1624
Subject(s) - atopic dermatitis , medicine , area under the curve , pharmacokinetics , psoriasis , provocation test , gastroenterology , dermatology , pathology , alternative medicine
Crisaborole ointment, 2%, is a nonsteroidal phosphodiesterase 4 inhibitor for the treatment of mild to moderate atopic dermatitis. Results from 2 randomized, double‐blind, vehicle‐controlled phase 3 studies showed that twice‐daily crisaborole in children and adults with mild to moderate atopic dermatitis was efficacious and well tolerated. Initial pharmacokinetics (PK) studies of crisaborole indicated absorption with measurable systemic levels of crisaborole. The current analysis was conducted to correlate steady‐state systemic exposure parameters with ointment dose and identify covariates impacting PK parameters in healthy participants and patients with atopic dermatitis or psoriasis. A nonlinear regression analysis was conducted using ointment dose and noncompartmental PK parameters at steady state (area under the curve [AUC ss ] and maximum concentration [C max,ss ]). PK data were available from 244 participants across 6 clinical studies (AUC ss , N = 239; C max,ss , N = 241). Disease condition had the greatest impact on slope in both models, corresponding to 2.5‐fold higher AUC ss and C max,ss values at a given ointment dose in patients with atopic dermatitis or psoriasis relative to healthy participants. Disease severity, race/ethnicity, and sex had marginal effects on AUC ss and C max,ss . Systemic exposures were similar across age groups ≥2 years of age when the same percentage of body surface area (%BSA) was treated. Predictive performance plots for AUC ss and C max,ss for different age groups demonstrated that the models adequately describe the observed data. Model predictions indicated that systemic exposure to crisaborole in pediatric patients (2‐17 years) is unlikely to exceed systemic exposure in adults (≥18 years), even at the highest possible ointment dose corresponding to a %BSA of 90.

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