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Bioequivalence Study of CRushed TriUMeq With or Without Drip Feed Compared to the Whole Tablet (SCRUM)

R

Radboud University Medical Center

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 1

Conditions

HIV

Treatments

Drug: Triumeq crushed + drip feed
Drug: Triumeq crushed + breakfast
Drug: Triumeq

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02569346
UMCN-AKF 15.02

Details and patient eligibility

About

Dolutegravir is an HIV-1 integrase inhibitor which is marketed as a single tablet (Tivicay®) and in a fixed dose combination tablet with abacavir and lamivudine (Triumeq®, referred to as TRI). For patients with swallowing difficulties, administration of whole tablets can be problematic and tablets are cut or crushed to ease administration.

Currently there is no information about crushing TRI tablets. Therefore this study will be conducted to investigate whether crushed and suspended TRI and crushed and suspended TRI with drip feed are bioequivalent to taking TRI as a whole.

Full description

Dolutegravir is an HIV-1 integrase inhibitor which is marketed as a single tablet (Tivicay®) and in a fixed dose combination tablet with abacavir and lamivudine (Triumeq®, referred to as TRI). For patients with swallowing difficulties, administration of whole tablets can be problematic and tablets are cut or crushed to ease administration. In addition, if HIV patients develop opportunistic infections, patients can become severely ill and may end up on the intensive care. Patients at the intensive care might not be able to swallow medication. Therefore it is useful to know if it is possible to administer TRI through a different route, like a feeding tube. If TRI can be crushed or dissolved and given through a catheter it is also useful to know if it can be given with drip feed.

Currently there is no information about crushing TRI tablets. Depending on the biopharmaceutical characteristics of a drug formulation, crushing tablets can lead to altered pharmacokinetics of drugs. This has been shown for some of the antiretroviral drugs, such as ritonavir, lopinavir, efavirenz and tenofovir.

It is important to know whether pharmacokinetics are influenced by crushing of tablets as low concentrations are associated with virologic failure. Therefore higher doses or switching to other HIV-drugs might be needed. In addition, higher Cmax and/or exposure can lead to toxicity. As a result therapeutic drug monitoring is advised, or crushing the drug is a contra-indication based on the available data.

It has been shown that DTG plasma concentration is influenced by food, with higher AUC en Cmax after a high-fat meal compared to administration in a fasted state. During clinical development, however, dolutegravir intake was studied without regard to food intake. Therefore, it is recommended that dolutegravir can be taken with or without food.

In addition, it has been shown that simultaneous oral ingestion of antacids and dolutegravir gives a decrease in Cmax and AUC of dolutegravir. This interaction is not shown for co-ingestion with omeprazole, which makes it unlikely that this interaction is caused by a pH-lowering effect influencing the absorption of dolutegravir. It is probably a local gastrointestinal complexation phenomenon, similar to what has been observed with other HIV integrase inhibitors. A possible pharmacokinetic interaction between dolutegravir and complexation formers may be expected. Especially considering the active binding sites of dolutegravir which bind magnesium metal ion cofactors. It is currently unclear if certain foods or liquids containing high amounts of magnesium or other cations, like drip feed, can cause this same interaction.

Therefore this study will be conducted to investigate whether crushed and suspended TRI and crushed and suspended TRI with drip feed are bioequivalent to taking TRI as a whole.

Enrollment

22 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 55 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Subject is at least 18 and not older than 55 years of age at the day of screening.
  • Subject weighs at least 40 kg.
  • Subject has a BMI of 18.5-30 kg/m2, extremes included.
  • Subject is able and willing to sign the Informed Consent Form prior to screening evaluations.
  • Subject is in good age-appropriate health condition as established by medical history, physical examination, electrocardiography, results of biochemistry, haematology and urinalysis testing within four weeks prior to day 1. Results of biochemistry, haematology and urinalysis testing should be within the laboratory's reference ranges (see Appendix A). If laboratory results are not within the reference ranges, the subject is included based on the Investigator's judgment that the observed deviations are not clinically relevant. This should be clearly recorded.
  • Subject has a normal blood pressure and pulse rate, according to the Investigator's judgment.
  • Subject does not smoke more than 10 cigarettes, 2 cigars, or 2 pipes per day for at least 3 months prior to day 1.

Exclusion criteria

  • Positive HIV test.
  • Positive hepatitis B or C test.
  • Positive HLA-B*5701 status (the risk for abacavir hypersensitivity reaction to occur is high for subjects who test positive for the HLA-B*5701 allele).
  • Documented history of sensitivity/idiosyncrasy to medicinal products or excipients.
  • Relevant history or current condition that might interfere with drug absorption, distribution, metabolism or excretion.
  • Inability to understand the nature and extent of the study and the procedures required.
  • Pregnant female (as confirmed by an hCG test performed less than 4 weeks before day 1) or breast-feeding female. Female subjects of childbearing potential without adequate contraception, e.g. hysterectomy, bilateral tubal ligation, (non-hormonal) intrauterine device, total abstinence, double barrier methods, or two years post-menopausal. They must agree to take precautions in order to prevent a pregnancy throughout the entire conduct of the study.
  • Therapy with any drug (including herbal remedies, multivitamins, magnesium- and calcium-containing supplements, etc.) (for two weeks preceding day 1), except for acetaminophen.
  • Relevant history or presence of pulmonary disorders (especially COPD), cardiovascular disorders, neurological disorders (especially seizures and migraine), psychiatric disorders, gastro-intestinal disorders, renal disorders (renal failure determined as an estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate (eGFR) below 50 ml/min (MDRD-based)), hepatic disorders (Child-Pugh B or C), hormonal disorders (especially diabetes mellitus), coagulation disorders.
  • History of or current abuse of drugs, alcohol or solvents.
  • Gluten free diet.
  • Participation in a drug study within 60 days prior to day 1.
  • Donation of blood within 60 days prior to day 1.
  • Febrile illness within 3 days before day 1.
  • Co-worker of Radboud university medical center.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

22 participants in 3 patient groups

Triumeq whole
Active Comparator group
Description:
Single-dose Triumeq as a whole tablet in a fasted state
Treatment:
Drug: Triumeq crushed + breakfast
Drug: Triumeq crushed + drip feed
Triumeq crushed + breakfast
Experimental group
Description:
Single-dose crushed and suspended Triumeq in a fasted state
Treatment:
Drug: Triumeq
Drug: Triumeq crushed + drip feed
Triumeq crushed + drip feed
Experimental group
Description:
250 ml drip feed (Nutrison) followed by a single-dose crushed and suspended Triumeq
Treatment:
Drug: Triumeq
Drug: Triumeq crushed + breakfast

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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