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8 de octubre de 2024
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Pharmacokinetics and tolerability of anagrelide hydrochloride in young (18-50 years) and elderly (≥ 65 years) patients with essential thrombocythemia

Publicado en: International Journal Of Clinical Pharmacology And Therapeutics. 50 (11): 787-796 - 2012-11-01 50(11), DOI: 10.5414/CP201711

Autores:

Besses, C; Alvarez-Larrán, A; Coll, R; Freitag, C; Troy, S; Martin, P; Purkayastha, J
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Afiliaciones

- Autor o Coautor
Department of Hematology, Cancer Research Programme, Hospital del Mar-IMIM, Passeig Marítim 25-29, 08003 Barcelona, Spain. cbesses@parcdesalutmar.cat - Autor o Coautor

Resumen

Objective: To ascertain the role of patient age as an influencing factor in the pharmacokinetics of anagrelide and to clarify whether different dosing is required in young (18 - 50 years) vs. elderly (>= 65 years) patients with essential thrombocythemia (ET). Method: This Phase II, multicenter, open-label study compared the pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and tolerability of anagrelide and its active metabolite, 3-hydroxy-anagrelide, in young and elderly patients with ET. Three days prior to pharmacokinetic assessment, patients divided their normal daily anagrelide into a structured twice-daily dosing (BID) schedule. Serial blood samples were obtained for pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic analysis over a 12-h dosing interval. Anagrelide and 3-hydroxy-anagrelide plasma concentrations were normalized to a common dose (1 mg BID) to control for dosing differences between patients. Patients were monitored routinely for adverse events (AEs) and vital signs. Results: A total of 24 patients (12 young; 12 elderly) completed the study. The dose-normalized anagrelide maximum observed plasma concentration (C-max) and area under the plasma concentration vs. time curve over one dosing interval (AUC(tau)), were higher in elderly patients compared with young patients (C-max: 3.63 vs. 2.66 ng/ml; p = 0.09, AUC(tau): 10.3 vs. 6.4 ngxh/ml; p = 0.01). In contrast, the dose-normalized 3-hydroxy-anagrelide C-max and AUC(tau) were lower in the elderly patients when compared with young patients (C-max: 4.19 vs. 7.26 ng/ml; p = 0.02, AUC(tau): 17.4 vs. 27.6 ngxh/ml; p = 0.03). No significant difference was observed in the geometric mean terminal half-life (t(1/2)) of anagrelide in elderly and young patients (1.4 vs. 1.3 h, respectively; p = 0.38), whereas the geometric mean t(1/2) of 3-hydroxy-anagrelide was significantly longer in the elderly patients compared with the young patients (3.5 vs. 2.7 11, respectively; p = 0.01). There were no significant differences in platelet count or vital signs between the age groups. Anagrelide was well tolerated; there were no serious AEs or AEs that led to withdrawal from the study. Conclusions: To conclude, the differences observed in anagrelide and 3-hydroxy-anagrelide pharmacokinetics do not justify using a different dosing regimen in young vs. elderly patients with ET.
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Palabras clave

AdolescentAdultAge factorsAge-related-changesAgedAnagrelideArea under curveBiotransformationCytochrome-p450EfficacyEssential thrombocythemiaEuropeExperienceFemaleHalf-lifeHematologic agentsHumansHydroxylationLong-termMaleMetabolic clearance rateMiddle agedModels, biologicalPharmacodynamicsPharmacokineticsPhosphodiesterase iiPlatelet countQuinazolinesSafetThrombocythemia, essentialThrombopoiesisTreatment outcomeYoung adult

Indicios de calidad

Impacto bibliométrico. Análisis de la aportación y canal de difusión

El trabajo ha sido publicado en la revista International Journal Of Clinical Pharmacology And Therapeutics debido a la progresión y el buen impacto que ha alcanzado en los últimos años, según la agencia Scopus (SJR), se ha convertido en una referencia en su campo. En el año de publicación del trabajo, 2012, se encontraba en la posición , consiguiendo con ello situarse como revista Q2 (Segundo Cuartil), en la categoría Pharmacology (Medical). Destacable, igualmente, el hecho de que la Revista está posicionada en el Cuartil Q4 para la agencia WoS (JCR) en la categoría Pharmacology & Pharmacy.

Independientemente del impacto esperado determinado por el canal de difusión, es importante destacar el impacto real observado de la propia aportación.

Según las diferentes agencias de indexación, el número de citas acumuladas por esta publicación hasta la fecha 2026-02-07:

  • WoS: 10
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Impacto y visibilidad social

Desde la dimensión de Influencia o adopción social, y tomando como base las métricas asociadas a las menciones e interacciones proporcionadas por agencias especializadas en el cálculo de las denominadas “Métricas Alternativas o Sociales”, podemos destacar a fecha 2026-02-07:

  • La utilización de esta aportación en marcadores, bifurcaciones de código, añadidos a listas de favoritos para una lectura recurrente, así como visualizaciones generales, indica que alguien está usando la publicación como base de su trabajo actual. Esto puede ser un indicador destacado de futuras citas más formales y académicas. Tal afirmación es avalada por el resultado del indicador “Capture” que arroja un total de: 8 (PlumX).
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Reconocimientos ligados al ítem

This study was funded by Shire Pharmaceuticals. C. Besses and A. Alvarez-Larran received a grant to their institution and payment for development of educational presentations including service on speakers' bureaus. R. Coll, S. Troy, J. Purkayastha, P. Martin and C. Freitag are all Shire employees who hold Shire stocks and have Shire stock options., The study was funded by the Sponsor, Shire Pharmaceutical Development Ltd. Under the direction of the authors, Emma Burke, employee of iMed Comms, provided writing assistance for this publication. Editorial assistance in formatting, proofreading, copy editing, and fact checking was also provided by iMed Comms. Shire AG provided funding to iMed Comms for support in writing and editing this manuscript.
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