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2nd International Workshop on Clinical Pharmacology of HIV Therapy 
Noordwijk, The Netherlands    April 2 - 4, 2001

Poster:  Evaluation of the Inhibitory Quotient as a Pharmacodynamic Predictor of the Virologic Response to Protease Inhibitor Therapy # 7.1

Dale Kempf, Ann Hsu, Jeffrey Isaacson, Ping Jiang, Scott Brun, Cheryl Renz, G. Richard Granneman and Eugene Sun; Abbott Laboratories, Abbott Park, IL USA


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ABSTRACT

Background: Pharmacodynamic (PD) models that incorporate information on both drug pharmacokinetics and viral susceptibility are important for the understanding of the in vivo potency of antiretroviral agents. The inhibitory quotient (IQ), calculated as the ratio of Ctrough and human serum-adjusted IC50, is a PD model that has been used to estimate the activity of protease inhibitors (PIs). We have assessed the predictive ability of the IQ model in two clinical studies in PI-experienced subjects, where differences in baseline drug susceptibility due to pre-existing resistance allow for a large range in IQ values.

Methods: Study 957 evaluated the activity of lopinavir/r (LPV/r) + efavirenz + NRTIs in 57 multiple PI-experienced, NNRTI-naïve subjects with median baseline HIV RNA 4.5 log copies/mL. Study 985 evaluated the intensification of indinavir (IDV) therapy in subjects failing IDV + NRTIs by dose modification with ritonavir in 37 subjects with median baseline HIV RNA 3.3 log copies/mL. The IQ for each subject was calculated as Ctrough/(baseline fold IC50 x serum-adjusted IC50 for wt HIV) .  In Study 985, baseline fold IC50 was defined as the virtual phenotype based on the baseline genotype.

Results: In Study 957, response (400 at Week 24) was observed in 67% (14/21), 80% (12/15) and 100% (16/16) of subjects with LPV IQ of <4, 4-15 and >15, respectively (p <0.026). In Study 985, response (0.5 log10 decline or <50 c/mL at Week 24), was observed in 75% (12/16), of subjects with IDV IQ >2 and 0% (0/9) of subjects with IQ <2 (p <0.001).

Conclusion: In two clinical studies evaluating the activity of two different PIs with very different serum free fractions in PI-experienced subjects, IQ calculated for individual subjects was statistically significantly associated with virologic response.

INTRODUCTION

The inhibitory quotient (IQ) is a model for understanding and evaluating drug pharmacology that encompasses both pharmacokinetics and drug susceptibility (Fig. 1). Originally articulated for the effects of antibiotics (1), the IQ can be applied to HIV protease inhibitors (PIs) as the ratio of the Ctrough and the IC50. In order for a pharmacodynamic model such as IQ to be useful, it should be (a) standardized and (b) predictive of the in vivo efficacy of more than one drug. In this study, we examined the association of the IQ of lopinavir (LPV) and indinavir (IDV) in two separate studies in PI-experienced subjects experiencing virologic failure.

METHODS

Study Designs

Virology

Statistical Analysis

RESULTS

Characterization of baseline inhibitory quotient

Virologic response with respect to inhibitory quotient

Relative predictive value of IDV virtual IQ vs. virtual phenotype or IDV trough

CONCLUSIONS

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Abbott Laboratories

J Sylte, S Boller, M King, J Swerdlow, R Rode, O Jasinsky, R Bertz K Real, B Bernstein, T Japour, K Rynkiewicz, J Ryan, J Alfano J Lamm, J Franczyk, B Richards

Study 957 Investigators

N Clumeck, D Ho, S Becker, A Lazzarin, F Bergmann, G Pantaleo, G Carosi, J Rockstroh, S Danner ,R Tubiana, P-M Girard

Study 985 Investigators

A Zolopa, J Gallant, N Shulman, E Race, D Havlir, 

Virco

Brendan Larder

Virologic

Nick Hellmann

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Poster:  Evaluation of the Inhibitory Quotient as a Pharmacodynamic Predictor of the Virologic Response to Protease Inhibitor Therapy

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