Effect of Mild and Moderate Hepatic Impairment on the Pharmacokinetics, Safety, and Tolerability of a Single Dose of Oral Ivosidenib in Otherwise Healthy Participants

AbstractIvosidenib, a small ‐molecule inhibitor of mutant isocitrate dehydrogenase 1, is primarily cleared by hepatic metabolism. This open‐label study investigated the impact of hepatic impairment on ivosidenib pharmacokinetics (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03282513). Otherwise healthy participants with mild (n = 9) or moderate (n = 8) hepatic impairment (Child‐Pugh score) and matched participants with normal hepatic function (n = 16) received 1 oral dose of 500‐mg ivosidenib. Mild hepatic impairment had a negligible effect on total ivosidenib plasma exposure, with geometric mean ratios (90% confidence interval [CI]) of 0.933 (0.715‐1.22) for maximum concentration (Cmax) and 0.847 (0.624 ‐1.15) for area under the plasma concentration–time curve (AUC) in participants with mild hepatic impairment versus matched controls. Moderate hepatic impairment reduced total ivosidenib exposure by 28% to 44%, with geometric mean ratios (90%CI) of 0.565 (0.419‐0.763) for Cmax and 0.716 (0.479 ‐1.07) for AUC, although the 90%CI for AUC included 1.00. The ivosidenib unbound fraction was concentration dependent and higher in participants with mild/moderate hepatic impairment compared with matched controls. There was no apparent trend to increasing unbound Cmax with increased hepatic impairment severity. A single 500 ‐mg ivosidenib dose was well tolerated, with no serious or severe adverse events and no adverse events leading to discontinuation. We conclude that mild/moderate hepa...
Source: Clinical Pharmacology in Drug Development - Category: Drugs & Pharmacology Authors: Tags: Original Manuscript Source Type: research