scholarly journals Randomized study of the effect of gadopiclenol, a new gadolinium‐based contrast agent, on the QTc interval in healthy subjects

2020 ◽  
Vol 86 (11) ◽  
pp. 2174-2181
Author(s):  
Christian Funck‐Brentano ◽  
Mathieu Felices ◽  
Nathalie Le Fur ◽  
Corinne Dubourdieu ◽  
Pierre Desché ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol In Press (In Press) ◽  
Author(s):  
Taghi Amiriani ◽  
Vahid Khori ◽  
Ali Davarian ◽  
Niloofar Rajabli ◽  
Mahsa Niknam ◽  
...  

Background: Cirrhosis could lead to a long corrected QT (QTc) interval in a subgroup of patients, but there are spare data on its diurnal variation. Objectives: The present study aimed to determine the diurnal variation of QTc interval and its relationship to heart rate and blood pressure variation during 24-hour Holter-monitoring in non-alcoholic cirrhosis in comparison with the healthy controls. Methods: The study population comprised 15 patients with non-alcoholic cirrhosis and 15 healthy subjects, undergoing 24-hour electrocardiogram (ECG), heart rate, and blood pressure monitoring. The mean QT interval, mean QTc, maximum and minimum QT, QT dispersion (QT disp), heart rate, and mean arterial blood pressure were measured for each person for 24 hours. Liver stiffness measurement (LSM) was performed by FibroScan® 502 machine (EchoSense, Paris, France, 5 MHz). The results were demonstrated as percentages and mean ± SD. P value ≤ 0.05 was considered significant. Results: Mean QTc was significantly higher in cirrhosis (438 ms) than healthy controls (401.7 ms) (P = 0.03). The mean heart rate was significantly different in cirrhotic patients (79.6 ± 2.9/bpm) compared to healthy controls (72.47 ± 2.0/bpm) (P = 0.05). Conclusions: In this study, QTc was prolonged and increased with the severity of cirrhosis, and its diurnal variation in cirrhosis was different from healthy subjects.


2012 ◽  
Vol 56 (5) ◽  
pp. 2408-2413 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manoli Vourvahis ◽  
Rong Wang ◽  
Marie-Noella Ndongo ◽  
Melissa O'Gorman ◽  
Margaret Tawadrous

ABSTRACTThe objective of this study was to investigate the effect of a supratherapeutic dose of lersivirine (LRV) on corrected QT (QTc) interval using Fridericia's equation (QTcF) in healthy subjects. In this randomized, single-dose, placebo- and active-controlled 3-way crossover study, healthy adult males (n= 48) were randomized to receive LRV (2,400 mg), moxifloxacin (400 mg), or placebo for each treatment period. Triplicate 12-lead electrocardiogram measurements were performed, PK samples were collected, and vital signs were measured. Adverse event monitoring and safety laboratory testing were performed. All subjects were white (mean age, 39 years; body mass index [BMI], 25.6 kg/m2) and completed the study. Following LRV administration, the upper bound of the 90% confidence interval (CI) for time-matched adjusted mean differences to placebo QTcF at each time point postdose was below the regulatory threshold of 10 ms, satisfying the criteria for a negative thorough QT/QTc study. The highest upper bound of QTcF 90% CI occurred at 6 h for LRV (3.32 ms; 90% CI, 1.47 to 5.17 ms). The study was deemed adequately sensitive as the lower bound of the 90% CI for the adjusted mean QTcF differences between moxifloxacin and placebo at the moxifloxacin historicalTmaxof 3 h was >5 ms (15.29 ms; 90% CI, 13.44 to 17.14 ms). There was no statistically significant relationship between LRV exposure and placebo-adjusted change from baseline QTcF or clinically significant changes in QRS complex, pulse rate (PR) interval, heart rate, or blood pressure. LRV (2,400 mg) did not prolong the QTcF interval, and no clinically relevant electrocardiogram or vital sign changes were observed in healthy subjects.


2011 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. S475-S475
Author(s):  
Gary Tong ◽  
Oleksandr Sverdlov ◽  
Wai Chan ◽  
Matthew Cahir ◽  
Jun-Sheng Wang ◽  
...  

1995 ◽  
Vol 10 (S3) ◽  
pp. 129s-135s ◽  
Author(s):  
H Allain ◽  
A Patat ◽  
A Lieury ◽  
F Le Coz ◽  
C Janus ◽  
...  

SummaryThe effect of zopiclone (7.5 mg) on attention, vigilance and memory components was evaluated during a nocturnal period in comparison to a placebo, to zolpidem (10 mg) and to flunitrazepam (1 mg) in a double blind, randomized study, after administration of a single dose in 16 young healthy volunteers. It appears that there is a clear effect on attention and vigilance; this effect is apparent during the kinetic phase of the absorption of the medication. The effect on memory is transient and is absent four hours after the ingestion of the drug. The objective results are not strictly consistent with the chronology of the subjective parameters (Leeds scale — Visual Analogue Scale). The three hypnotics under comparison do not fundamentally differ except in their kinetic/pharmacodynamic effect relationship. One important fact, taking the parameters as a whole, is that there is no objective “residual” effect.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 4362-4362
Author(s):  
Adam del Corral ◽  
Catherine Dutreix ◽  
Alice Huntsman Labed ◽  
Sumita Rai ◽  
Kai Grosch ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 4362 Midostaurin (PKC412) is a multi-targeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) of several receptors, including wild-type and mutant variants of KIT and the FMS-like tyrosine kinase 3 (FLT3) receptor, and has known roles in hematopoiesis and leukemia. Midostaurin has demonstrated activity in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and myelodysplastic syndrome in phase 1 and 2 trials, and is currently under investigation in a randomized phase 3 AML study at 50mg twice daily (bid) in combination with chemotherapy and a phase 2 monotherapy study of aggressive systemic mastocytosis (ASM) at 100mg bid. Despite the absence of specific midostaurin-related cardiac toxicity issues, we conducted a dedicated phase 1 study to directly investigate the effect of midostaurin on QTc interval. Healthy subjects were randomized to 3 treatment arms: placebo; midostaurin administered orally at 75mg bid on days 1 and 2 and once daily (od) on day 3; or an active control arm of moxifloxacin administered orally at 400mg od on day 3. The primary variable was QTcF interval on day 3 corrected for baseline and placebo in the midostaurin and moxifloxacin treatment arms. Drug exposure levels at each time point were confirmed for moxifloxacin, midostaurin, and its two metabolites – CGP62221 and CGP52421. Of 192 subjects enrolled, 166 completed the study. 24 of 80 subjects discontinued in the midostaurin arm: 19 (23%) due to adverse events (AEs), 17 of which encompassed expected gastrointestinal events. No patients were discontinued for AEs in the other 2 treatment groups. Discontinued patients were not included in the ECG analysis. In time-matched analysis of QTcF interval change, the maximum mean change in the midostaurin arm corrected for baseline and placebo was 0.72ms with a 90% confidence interval (CI) upper bound of 4.71ms, which excluded 10ms. At each nominal time point, the mean change from baseline placebo-corrected for midostaurin was <0ms. The QTcF change point estimate corrected for time-averaged baseline and placebo also showed a lack of QTc prolongation for midostaurin. Moxifloxacin had a maximum mean change corrected for baseline and placebo of 10.7ms with a lower unadjusted 90% CI of 6.4ms 1 hour post-dose on day 3. Plasma concentration vs QTcF change from baseline analysis confirmed a negative or lack of QT effect by midostaurin but a positive correlation for moxifloxacin. No symptomatic, clinically significant new post-baseline morphological abnormalities were identified in the study. 3 patients in the midostaurin group at a single time point or evaluation experienced new post-baseline T-wave abnormalities, as did 1 and 4 patients in the placebo and moxifloxacin groups, respectively, some at multiple time points. No subject had a new >30ms or >480ms change from baseline for QTcF or QTcI. For QTcB the only occurrences of change were in the 30–60ms category: 1 (1.3%) of the subjects on midostaurin met this non-specific outlier criterion; 7 (15.9%) on moxifloxacin; and 1 (1.5%) on placebo. 1 new U-wave abnormality was noted in the moxifloxacin group. The peak plasma concentration of midostaurin achieved in the present study (mean 2273ng/mL) covered the peak and trough plasma exposure observed at 50mg bid (2220ng/mL and 1005ng/mL, respectively) in AML patients. The peak level achieved for midostaurin was also above the steady-state trough level of 1060ng/mL, but below the peak concentration of 3500ng/mL, for the 100mg bid dose. Midostaurin was safe and generally well tolerated: 97% of the AEs noted in subjects while on study drug (n=61; 40%) were reported as grade 1. No grade 3/4 AEs were reported. While some TKIs exert pharmacologic effects on QTc interval, this carefully conducted trial demonstrates that midostaurin at 75mg bid has no effect on heart rate, AV conduction, or cardiac depolarization. The midostaurin exposure achieved in this study exceeds the peak and trough levels for the 50mg bid dose regimen under investigation in the AML phase 3 trial. The midostaurin exposure achieved also exceeds the steady state trough level, but not the peak level, of the 100mg bid dose regimen under investigation in the phase 2 ASM trial. Further, the effects of the long-acting metabolite CGP52421 cannot be fully addressed by this short study. Due to the lack of QT prolongation observed in this trial, we recommend reduced but continued ECG monitoring and omission of QT-related exclusion criteria in future midostaurin clinical trials. Disclosures: del Corral: Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation: Employment. Dutreix:Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation: Employment. Huntsman Labed:Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation: Employment. Rai:Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation: Employment. Grosch:Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation: Employment. Morganroth:eResearchTechnology Inc: Employment, Equity Ownership, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation: Consultancy, Research Funding. Wang:Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation: Employment, Equity Ownership.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document