BMC Nephrology (May 2019)

Randomized, open-label, comparative phase IV study on the bioavailability of Ciclosporin Pro (Teva) versus Sandimmun® Optoral (Novartis) under fasting versus fed conditions in patients with stable renal transplants

  • Anja Gäckler,
  • Sebastian Dolff,
  • Hana Rohn,
  • Johannes Korth,
  • Benjamin Wilde,
  • Ute Eisenberger,
  • Anna Mitchell,
  • Andreas Kribben,
  • Oliver Witzke

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12882-019-1340-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Background The influence of pre- or postprandial administration on pharmacokinetics of cyclosporine is supposed to be less in gel-based formulations than in microemulsions. This study was designed to investigate the influence of a high-fat meal on the pharmacokinetic profile of the two cyclosporine containing formulations Ciclosporin Pro (gel-based emulsion) and Sandimmun®Optoral (microemulsion) in renal transplant recipients. Methods A randomized, open-label, repeated-measurement, comparative phase IV trial was conducted with two sequence groups for nutrition condition (fasting→fed, fed→fasting) and two treatment phases (Sandimmun® Optoral → Ciclosporin Pro), each covering both nutrition conditions. Primary pharmacokinetic variable of interest was the reduction of bioavailability due to high-fat food compared to fasting conditions measured by the difference D of ln-transformed bioavailability variables (AUCSS, τ, Css, max, und Css, min). Results A nutrition effect was found for both study medications with respect to the parameters AUCSS, τ and CSS, max, but not to CSS, min. The reduction of bioavailability caused by high-fat food was not significantly different for Sandimmun®Optoral and Ciclosporin Pro. Conclusions An effect of high-fat breakfast prior to the morning dose on AUCSS, τ and CSS, max was found for Sandimmun® Optoral and for Ciclosporin Pro. Trough level monitoring did not capture ingestion-related variability. Conversion to Ciclosporin Pro seems to be safe with regard to intra-individual pharmacokinetic variability. Trial registration EudraCT No. 2009–011354-18 (29th April 2019)

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