HTB

FDA approve paediatric dose for darunavir

On December 16, 2011, The Food and Drug Administration approved an oral suspension formulation of darunavir (Prezista). Darunavir is now available as a 100 mg/mL oral suspension.

Additionally, the product labeling was updated to provide dosing recommendations for paediatric patients ages 3 to less than 6 years of age and for adult and paediatric patients greater than 6 years of age who can not swallow darunavir tablets.

Treatment-naïve adults and treatment experienced adults with no darunavir resistance associated substitutions can take darunavir 8 ml once daily with 1.25 ml of ritonavir once daily with food. The 8 mL dose should be taken as two 4 mL administrations with the included oral dosing syringe.

For treatment-experienced adults with at least one darunavir resistance associated substitution the dose for oral suspension is 6 mL twice daily with 1.25 mL ritonavir twice daily with food.

For paediatric patients, dosing with oral suspension or tablets is based on weight. Please refer to full prescribing information for details. Do not use darunavir/ritonavir in paediatric patients below 3 years of age.

Section 6 Adverse Reactions (ADRs) was updated as follows:

  • ADRs to darunavir/ritonavir (all grades, >/= 3%), excluding lab abnormalities, were diarrhea (19%), vomiting (14%), rash (10%).
  • There were no Grade 3 or 4 laboratory abnormalities considered as ADRs in this study.

Section 14: Clinical Studies was updated to reflect the results from the paediatric trial as follows:

Study TMC114-C228

Treatment-experienced paediatric subjects between the ages of 3 and less than 6 years and weighing greater than or equal to 10 kg to less than 20 kg received darunavir oral suspension with ritonavir oral solution plus background therapy consisting of at least two active non-protease inhibitor antiretroviral drugs. Twenty-one subjects received at least one dose of darunavir/ritonavir.

The 21 subjects had a median age of 4.4 years (range 3 to less than 6 years), and were 48% male, 57% Black, 29%, white and 14% other. The mean baseline plasma HIV-1 was 4.34 log10 copies/mL, the median baseline CD4+ cell count was 927 x 106 cells/l (range: 209 to 2,429 x 106 cells/l) and the median baseline CD4+ percentage was 27.7% (range: 15.6% to 51.1%). Overall, 24% of subjects had a baseline plasma HIV-1 RNA greater than or equal to 100,000 copies/mL. All subjects had used greater than or equal to 2 nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs), 62% of subjects had used greater than or equal to 1 non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTI) and 76% had previously used at least one HIV protease inhibitor (PI).

Twenty subjects (95%) completed the 24 week period. One subject prematurely discontinued treatment due to vomiting assessed as related to ritonavir.

The proportion of subjects with HIV-1 RNA less than 50 copies/mL and less than 400 copies/mL was -57% and 81%, respectively. The mean change in CD4+ percentage from baseline was 4%. The mean change in CD4+ cell count from baseline was 109 x 106 cells/L.

Dose recommendations from the two studies were based on the following:

  • Similar darunavir plasma exposures in children compared to adults, and
  • Similar virologic response rates and safety profile in children compared to adults

Source: FDA HIV/AIDS Update (16 December 2011).

For full details please refer to the updated prescribing information:

http://dailymed.nlm.nih.gov/dailymed/about.cfm

Links to other websites are current at date of posting but not maintained.