Pharmacodynamics and Drug Action

Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics (2005) 77, 572–582; doi: 10.1016/j.clpt.2005.02.004

A Pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic Model for the Quantitative Prediction of Dofetilide Clinical QT Prolongation from Human Ether-a-go-go-related Gene Current Inhibition Data*

Daniël M. Jonker PhD1, Leslie A. Kenna PhD1, Derek Leishman PhD1, Rob Wallis PhD1, Peter A. Milligan PhD1 and E. Niclas Jonsson PhD1

1Division of Pharmacokinetics and Drug Therapy, Department of Pharmaceutical Biosciences, Faculty of Pharmacy, Uppsala University.

Correspondence: Daniël M. Jonker, PhD, Division of Pharmacokinetics and Drug Therapy, Faculty of Pharmacy, Uppsala University, PO Box 591, 75124 Uppsala, Sweden E-mail: daniel.jonker@farmbio.uu.se

*Supported by Pfizer Global Research and Development.

Received 2 December 2004; Accepted 10 February 2005.

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Abstract

Background: QT prolongation is an important biomarker of the arrhythmia torsades de pointes and appears to be related mainly to blockade of delayed inward cardiac rectifier potassium currents. The aim of this study was to quantify the relationship between in vitro human ether-a-go-go-related gene (hERG) potassium channel blockade and the magnitude of QT prolongation in humans for the class III antiarrhythmic dofetilide.

Methods: The in vitro affinity and activity of dofetilide were determined in recombinant cell cultures expressing the hERG channel, and the QT-prolonging effect of dofetilide was assessed in 5 clinical studies (80 healthy volunteers and 17 patients with ischemic heart disease). A population pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic analysis of the in vitro and in vivo data was performed in NONMEM by use of the operational model of pharmacologic agonism to estimate the efficiency of transduction from ion channel binding to Fridericia-corrected QT response.

Results: A 3-compartment pharmacokinetic model with first-order absorption characterized the time course of dofetilide concentrations. On the basis of an in vitro potency of 5.13 ng/mL for potassium current inhibition and predicted unbound dofetilide concentrations, the estimated transducer ratio (tau) of 6.2 suggests that the QT response plateaus before currents are fully blocked. In our study population, 10% hERG blockade corresponds to a QT prolongation of 20 ms (95% confidence interval, 12–32 ms). With long-term dofetilide administration, tolerance develops with a half-life of 4.7 days.

Conclusions: The current mechanism-based pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic model quantified the relationship between in vitro hERG channel blockade and clinical QT prolongation for dofetilide. This model may prove valuable for assessing the risk of QT prolongation in humans for other drugs that selectively block the hERG channel on the basis of in vitro assays and pharmacokinetic properties.

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