Model-Informed Development of Sotalol Loading and Dose Escalation Employing an Intravenous Infusion

Sotalol is often employed to prevent recurrence of symptomatic atrial flutter/atrial fibrillation. Because sotalol can prolong the QT interval excessively causing ventricular arrhythmias, a 3-day in-hospital loading or dose escalation period is mandated with oral administration in the product label...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Cardiology research Vol. 11; no. 5; pp. 294 - 304
Main Authors: Somberg, John C, Vinks, Alexander A, Dong, Min, Molnar, Janos
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Canada Elmer Press 01-10-2020
Subjects:
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Abstract Sotalol is often employed to prevent recurrence of symptomatic atrial flutter/atrial fibrillation. Because sotalol can prolong the QT interval excessively causing ventricular arrhythmias, a 3-day in-hospital loading or dose escalation period is mandated with oral administration in the product label for patient safety. In patients with normal renal function, 3 days (five oral doses) are required to obtain steady state maximum sotalol concentration, which results in maximum QT prolongation. The aim of this study is to develop an intravenous to oral loading regime for sotalol therapy that reduces the 3-day in-hospital initiation or dose escalation with oral administration to 1 day without compromising patient safety. Using model-informed drug development techniques, simulations were developed for initiation and dose escalation of sotalol therapy by employing an intravenous loading dose followed by oral sotalol administrations. In patients with normal renal function, an initial 1-h loading dose of intravenous sotalol followed by two oral doses in 24 h has been developed permitting attainment of three maximum serum concentrations reflecting maximum QT prolongation in a 1-day observation period. Dosing regimens for patients with impaired renal function are also developed. In patients with normal renal function, using an intravenous loading dose followed by oral administrations permits safe initiation or dose escalation of sotalol in 1 day instead of the 3-day dosing regimen with oral administration.
AbstractList Sotalol is often employed to prevent recurrence of symptomatic atrial flutter/atrial fibrillation. Because sotalol can prolong the QT interval excessively causing ventricular arrhythmias, a 3-day in-hospital loading or dose escalation period is mandated with oral administration in the product label for patient safety. In patients with normal renal function, 3 days (five oral doses) are required to obtain steady state maximum sotalol concentration, which results in maximum QT prolongation. The aim of this study is to develop an intravenous to oral loading regime for sotalol therapy that reduces the 3-day in-hospital initiation or dose escalation with oral administration to 1 day without compromising patient safety. Using model-informed drug development techniques, simulations were developed for initiation and dose escalation of sotalol therapy by employing an intravenous loading dose followed by oral sotalol administrations. In patients with normal renal function, an initial 1-h loading dose of intravenous sotalol followed by two oral doses in 24 h has been developed permitting attainment of three maximum serum concentrations reflecting maximum QT prolongation in a 1-day observation period. Dosing regimens for patients with impaired renal function are also developed. In patients with normal renal function, using an intravenous loading dose followed by oral administrations permits safe initiation or dose escalation of sotalol in 1 day instead of the 3-day dosing regimen with oral administration.
BACKGROUNDSotalol is often employed to prevent recurrence of symptomatic atrial flutter/atrial fibrillation. Because sotalol can prolong the QT interval excessively causing ventricular arrhythmias, a 3-day in-hospital loading or dose escalation period is mandated with oral administration in the product label for patient safety. In patients with normal renal function, 3 days (five oral doses) are required to obtain steady state maximum sotalol concentration, which results in maximum QT prolongation. The aim of this study is to develop an intravenous to oral loading regime for sotalol therapy that reduces the 3-day in-hospital initiation or dose escalation with oral administration to 1 day without compromising patient safety.METHODSUsing model-informed drug development techniques, simulations were developed for initiation and dose escalation of sotalol therapy by employing an intravenous loading dose followed by oral sotalol administrations.RESULTSIn patients with normal renal function, an initial 1-h loading dose of intravenous sotalol followed by two oral doses in 24 h has been developed permitting attainment of three maximum serum concentrations reflecting maximum QT prolongation in a 1-day observation period. Dosing regimens for patients with impaired renal function are also developed.CONCLUSIONSIn patients with normal renal function, using an intravenous loading dose followed by oral administrations permits safe initiation or dose escalation of sotalol in 1 day instead of the 3-day dosing regimen with oral administration.
Author Vinks, Alexander A
Molnar, Janos
Somberg, John C
Dong, Min
AuthorAffiliation a American Institute of Therapeutics, 21 N Skokie Hwy, Suite G-3, Lake Bluff, IL 60044, USA
b Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, 3333 Burnet Avenue, MLC6018, Cincinnati, OH 45229, USA
AuthorAffiliation_xml – name: a American Institute of Therapeutics, 21 N Skokie Hwy, Suite G-3, Lake Bluff, IL 60044, USA
– name: b Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, 3333 Burnet Avenue, MLC6018, Cincinnati, OH 45229, USA
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: John C
  surname: Somberg
  fullname: Somberg, John C
  organization: American Institute of Therapeutics, 21 N Skokie Hwy, Suite G-3, Lake Bluff, IL 60044, USA
– sequence: 2
  givenname: Alexander A
  surname: Vinks
  fullname: Vinks, Alexander A
  organization: Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, 3333 Burnet Avenue, MLC6018, Cincinnati, OH 45229, USA
– sequence: 3
  givenname: Min
  surname: Dong
  fullname: Dong, Min
  organization: Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, 3333 Burnet Avenue, MLC6018, Cincinnati, OH 45229, USA
– sequence: 4
  givenname: Janos
  surname: Molnar
  fullname: Molnar, Janos
  organization: American Institute of Therapeutics, 21 N Skokie Hwy, Suite G-3, Lake Bluff, IL 60044, USA
BackLink https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32849964$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed
BookMark eNpVkU1PwzAMhiM0xGBM_AOUG1wK-WrTXJDQGDBpiANwjtI0HUVpMpp20v49gY4JfLEtP3pt6z0BI-edAeAMoyvMOEPXusWY0QNwjAWhCckpH-1rIsZgGsIHisHSNOPsCIwpyZkQGTsG-smXxiYLV_m2MSW8Mxtj_boxroO-gi--U9ZbuPSqrN0KKhcRHwycB62s6mrv4LxZW78dpnDhulZtjPN9iHXVh0icgsNK2WCmuzwBb_fz19ljsnx-WMxul4kmWdYlOecFJ0hQJkiFCMWkLBAtYqNFhkRWFmWmK5xRwbVWInIUpwXOBSGoSjmlE3Az6K77Iv6izfctVq7bulHtVnpVy_8TV7_Lld9IziiKMlHgcifQ-s_ehE42ddDGWuVMfEgSRnnOWI5FRC8GVLc-hNZU-zUYyR9X5OBKJM__XrXnfj2gXx8oiYY
CitedBy_id crossref_primary_10_1111_jce_15852
crossref_primary_10_1111_jce_15819
crossref_primary_10_1002_jcph_1841
crossref_primary_10_1111_jce_15342
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_jacep_2022_11_026
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_hrthm_2024_02_046
crossref_primary_10_1016_j_jacep_2022_12_027
crossref_primary_10_1097_HPC_0000000000000308
crossref_primary_10_1007_s40256_022_00529_6
crossref_primary_10_1007_s10840_024_01829_4
crossref_primary_10_1111_jce_15339
ContentType Journal Article
Copyright Copyright 2020, Somberg et al.
Copyright 2020, Somberg et al. 2020
Copyright_xml – notice: Copyright 2020, Somberg et al.
– notice: Copyright 2020, Somberg et al. 2020
DBID NPM
AAYXX
CITATION
7X8
5PM
DOI 10.14740/cr1143
DatabaseName PubMed
CrossRef
MEDLINE - Academic
PubMed Central (Full Participant titles)
DatabaseTitle PubMed
CrossRef
MEDLINE - Academic
DatabaseTitleList PubMed
MEDLINE - Academic
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Medicine
DocumentTitleAlternate IV and Oral Loading of Sotalol
EISSN 1923-2837
EndPage 304
ExternalDocumentID 10_14740_cr1143
32849964
Genre Journal Article
GroupedDBID ---
53G
5VS
ADBBV
ADRAZ
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
AOIJS
BAWUL
DIK
EBS
EJD
GROUPED_DOAJ
GX1
H13
HYE
KQ8
M48
NPM
OK1
PGMZT
RNS
RPM
AAYXX
CITATION
7X8
5PM
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-c266t-877b72093492f02312db03b92fc96096dbd6cf16397cca9934315b189220f5733
IEDL.DBID RPM
ISSN 1923-2829
IngestDate Tue Sep 17 21:20:19 EDT 2024
Sat Aug 17 05:40:04 EDT 2024
Fri Aug 23 00:51:56 EDT 2024
Sat Nov 02 12:27:51 EDT 2024
IsDoiOpenAccess true
IsOpenAccess true
IsPeerReviewed false
IsScholarly true
Issue 5
Keywords Simulations
Dose escalation
Dose initiation
Intravenous sotalol
Sotalol
Language English
License Copyright 2020, Somberg et al.
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial 4.0 International License, which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
LinkModel DirectLink
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c266t-877b72093492f02312db03b92fc96096dbd6cf16397cca9934315b189220f5733
Notes ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
OpenAccessLink https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7430892/
PMID 32849964
PQID 2437844819
PQPubID 23479
PageCount 11
ParticipantIDs pubmedcentral_primary_oai_pubmedcentral_nih_gov_7430892
proquest_miscellaneous_2437844819
crossref_primary_10_14740_cr1143
pubmed_primary_32849964
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 2020-10-01
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2020-10-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 10
  year: 2020
  text: 2020-10-01
  day: 01
PublicationDecade 2020
PublicationPlace Canada
PublicationPlace_xml – name: Canada
PublicationTitle Cardiology research
PublicationTitleAlternate Cardiol Res
PublicationYear 2020
Publisher Elmer Press
Publisher_xml – name: Elmer Press
SSID ssj0000455674
Score 2.2425082
Snippet Sotalol is often employed to prevent recurrence of symptomatic atrial flutter/atrial fibrillation. Because sotalol can prolong the QT interval excessively...
BACKGROUNDSotalol is often employed to prevent recurrence of symptomatic atrial flutter/atrial fibrillation. Because sotalol can prolong the QT interval...
SourceID pubmedcentral
proquest
crossref
pubmed
SourceType Open Access Repository
Aggregation Database
Index Database
StartPage 294
SubjectTerms Original
Title Model-Informed Development of Sotalol Loading and Dose Escalation Employing an Intravenous Infusion
URI https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32849964
https://search.proquest.com/docview/2437844819
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PMC7430892
Volume 11
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://sdu.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV1LT8MwDLYYB8QF8Wa8FCSu3frKo0cEQ0NiCGkgcauWtBFIo5324PdjJyva4MatVdwqtd3Yjp3PANfW4j8jCh2ILBFBankYKJOEwahUZSyl4Jnrn9Ifyqc3ddcjmBzenIVxRftGf3Sq8Wen-nh3tZWTT9Nt6sS6z4NbtHqhyuJuC1roG66E6G75TTkX0meT4ySgTKE_LBulMg27ZooRAHXPSXBhRmc_XTdIf7zM38WSK9bnfhd2lm4ju_HT24ONstqHrcEyMX4AhnqajQN_uKgs2EotEKstG9a0STNmj7UrmWejCknqWcl6M5SREw7zvX_9KHugWXw5_Fa8tgvaUzuE1_vey20_WPZPCAya3TkudFLLOMwIgNASzltc6DDReGMIZw4lVAhjI0rtoRzRUUFngusIORuHlnASj2CzqqvyBJil7kJIybVOUqOFkoYnQqkiUoorYdrAGibmEw-TkVN4QSzPPcvbcNUwN0cVprzEqCrxM3LCRFQYJkZZG449s39e0kipDXJNDD8EBI-9PoJa42Cyl1py-u8nz2A7pujale6dw-Z8uigvoDUrFpdO5b4BPO3a-w
link.rule.ids 230,315,729,782,786,887,27935,27936,53803,53805
linkProvider National Library of Medicine
linkToHtml http://sdu.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV3JTsMwEB2xSMCFfSmrkbiGZvOSI4KiIlqEBEjcotqJBVJJEKV8PzN2g1q4cUtkJ7L9bM-MZ_wG4MxaXDOi0IHIEhGkloeBMkkYDEpVxlIKnrn8Kd0HefesrjpEk8ObuzAuaN_o1_Nq-HZevb642Mr3N9Nu4sTa9_1LlHqhyuL2PCzieg2TKSPdbcAp50J6f3KcBOQr9Ndlo1SmYdt8oA1A-XMS3JpR3U9nRdIfPfN3uOSU_Lle-2fL12F1onCyC1-8AXNltQlL_YlLfQsMZUMbBv5aUlmwqSgiVlv2UNPxzpD1ahdszwYVVqlHJeuMEF0HK_NZg30pu6HWfznmV3y2YzqN24an687jZTeYZF4IDArsT9wipZZxmBF1oSWGuLjQYaLxxRBDHWJbCGMjcgriDEAVB9UQriPsWRxaYljcgYWqrso9YJbyEmFNrnWSGi2UNDwRShWRUlwJ0wLWDH7-7gk2cjJMCKrcQ9WC0waUHCc_eTQGVYndyIlNUaGBGWUt2PUg_fykQbcFcga-nwpErD1bgqg5gu0JSvv__vIElruP_V7eu7m7PYCVmGx0FwB4CAufH-PyCOZHxfjYTdtvI3Hwhw
linkToPdf http://sdu.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwpV1ZSwMxEB48QHzxPuoZwdd1zxz7KNqieCCo4NvSZDco1N1irb_fmaQtrb7p2y6ZLBu-JDOTmXwDcGotrhlR6kDkqQgyy6NAmTQKupWqEikFz139lKtHef-iLttEkzMp9eWS9o1-O6t772f126vLrey_m3CcJxY-3F2g1otUnoT90obzsIhrNuJTjrrbhDPOhfQx5SQNKF7or8zGmcyi0HygH0A1dFLcntHkz2bV0i9b82fK5JQO6qz-4-_XYGVkeLJzL7IOc1W9AUt3o9D6JhiqitYL_PWkqmRT2USsseyxoWOeHrttXNI969Yo0gwq1h4gyg5e5qsH-1Z2TSP4cgyw-GyHdCq3Bc-d9tPFVTCqwBAYVNyfuFVKLZMoJwpDS0xxSamjVOOLIaY6xLgUxsYUHMSZgKYOmiNcxzi6JLLEtLgNC3VTV7vALNUnQkmudZoZLZQ0PBVKlbFSXAnTAjYGoOh7oo2CHBSCq_BwteBkDEyBi4AiG926wmEUxKqo0NGM8xbseKAmHxkj3AI5A-FEgAi2Z1sQOUe0PUJq7889j2Hp4bJT3F7f3-zDckKuussDPICFz49hdQjzg3J45GbuN8wM8wc
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Model-Informed+Development+of+Sotalol+Loading+and+Dose+Escalation+Employing+an+Intravenous+Infusion&rft.jtitle=Cardiology+research&rft.au=Somberg%2C+John+C&rft.au=Vinks%2C+Alexander+A&rft.au=Dong%2C+Min&rft.au=Molnar%2C+Janos&rft.date=2020-10-01&rft.issn=1923-2829&rft.volume=11&rft.issue=5&rft.spage=294&rft.epage=304&rft_id=info:doi/10.14740%2Fcr1143&rft.externalDBID=NO_FULL_TEXT
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=1923-2829&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=1923-2829&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=1923-2829&client=summon