Oral eflornithine treatment of late-stage human African trypanosomiasis
Abstract
Human African trypanosomiasis is a fatal disease unless treated. It is a parasitic vector borne disease endemic in sub-Saharan African countries. Eflornithine is a recommended treatment for gambiense human African trypanosomiasis (g-HAT) in the later disease stage when the parasites have infected the central nervous system. Eflornithine is currently dosed as a racemic mixture of D- and L-eflornithine via repeated intravenous infusions, which comes with several disadvantages. The work in this thesis aimed to assess the feasibility of an oral eflornithine treatment. A chiral liquid chromatography method was developed for separation and preparation of the D- and L-eflornithine enantiomers from the racemic mixture. The acquired enantiopure material was used to determine that L-eflornithine had higher antiparasitic in vitro potency compared to D-eflornithine. The in vitro findings were used with a mathematical modeling approach to predict survival in late-stage g-HAT patients treated with L-eflornithine using pharmacodynamic time-to-event modeling. The in vivo pharmacokinetics in the rat after oral or intravenous doses of enantiopure L-eflornithine was characterized using nonlinear mixed effects modeling and compared to the racemic mixture. Moreover, the distribution of D- and L-eflornithine to the third brain ventricle from the systemic circulation was examined using in vivo microdialysis. Clinical pharmacokinetics in plasma and cerebrospinal fluid for L-eflornithine was modeled using literature data. The pharmacokinetic model was used to predict drug exposure and estimate the probability of target attainment for oral L-eflornithine-based treatments against late-stage g-HAT. L-eflornithine administered as monotherapy dosed at 750 mg/kg/day four or twelve times daily could serve as efficacious regimens. In combination with nifurtimox, dose regimens of L-eflornithine at 375 mg/kg/day dosed two, four or twelve times daily could be efficacious. These results are based on in vitro and preclinical in vivo data as well as clinical data using a translational modeling and simulation approach. Future clinical pharmacokinetic studies are warranted to assess the feasibility of an oral L-eflornithine-based treatment and to establish optimal treatment strategies against late-stage g-HAT.
Parts of work
I. Boberg M, Jonson AC, Leek H, Jansson-Löfmark R, Ashton M. Chiral chromatographic isolation on milligram scale of the human African trypanosomiasis treatment D- and L-eflornithine. ACS Omega, 2020; 5(37): 23885-91 https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.0c03121 II. Boberg M, Cal M, Kaiser M, Jansson-Löfmark R, Mäser P, Ashton M. Enantiospecific antitrypanosomal in vitro activity of eflornithine. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 2021; 15(7): e0009583 https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009583 III. Amilon C*, Boberg M*, Tärning J, Äbelö A, Ashton M, Jansson-Löfmark R. Population pharmacodynamic modeling of eflornithine-based treatments against late-stage gambiense human African trypanosomiasis and efficacy predictions of L-eflornithine-based therapy. AAPS J. 2022; 24(3): 48 https://doi.org/10.1208/s12248-022-00693-2 * Authors contributed equally IV. Boberg M, Akhondipour Salehabad Y, Oladetoun-Ageh E, Vallöf D, Jansson-Löfmark R, Ashton M. Enantiospecific pharmacokinetics after enantiopure and racemic dosing of eflornithine in the rat. In manuscript V. Boberg M, Jansson-Löfmark R, Na-Bangchang K, Ashton M. Pharmacokinetics of racemic eflornithine in human plasma and cerebrospinal fluid: Clinical perspectives for L-eflornithine against human African trypanosomiasis. In manuscript
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (Pharmaceutical science)
University
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology. Department of Pharmacology
Disputation
Fredagen den 16 december 2022, kl. 13.00, Sal Europa, Konferenscentrum Wallenberg, Medicinaregatan 20A, Göteborg.
https://gu-se.zoom.us/j/62915399227?pwd=VEwraDBNMVU4ZmZsWG5WalNFYURoZz09
Date of defence
2022-12-16
mikael.boberg@gu.se
Date
2022-11-21Author
Boberg, Mikael
Keywords
Sleeping Sickness
Neglected Tropical Diseases
Enantiomers
Nonlinear Mixed Effects Modeling
Pharmacokinetics
Pharmacodynamics
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-8009-963-9 (PRINT)
978-91-8009-964-6 (PDF)
Language
eng