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Featured researches published by Anna Plotka.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2014

The effects of boceprevir and telaprevir on the pharmacokinetics of maraviroc: an open-label, fixed-sequence study in healthy volunteers.

Manoli Vourvahis; Anna Plotka; Constantino Kantaridis; Annie Fang; Jayvant Heera

Objective:To evaluate the effects of boceprevir (BOC) and telaprevir (TVR) on the pharmacokinetics (PK) of maraviroc (MVC) in healthy volunteers. Methods:In this open-label, fixed-sequence study, 14 volunteers received MVC 150 mg twice daily alone for 5 days (period 1), followed by MVC + BOC 800 mg 3 times daily and MVC + TVR 750 mg 3 times daily, each for 10 days in periods 2 and 3, respectively, with a ≥10-day wash-out. PK was analyzed on day 5 of period 1 and day 10 of periods 2 and 3. Safety was also assessed. Results:Ratios of the adjusted geometric means (90% confidence intervals) for MVC area under the curve from predose to 12 hours, maximum plasma concentration, and plasma concentration at 12 hours were 3.02 (2.53 to 3.59), 3.33 (2.54 to 4.36), and 2.78 (2.40 to 3.23), respectively, for MVC + BOC versus MVC alone, and 9.49 (7.94 to 11.34), 7.81 (5.92 to 10.32), and 10.17 (8.73 to 11.85), respectively, for MVC + TVR versus MVC alone. PK profiles for MVC + BOC or TVR were consistent with historic values for BOC and TVR monotherapy. Adverse event incidence was higher with MVC + BOC and MVC + TVR versus MVC alone. Dysgeusia (50%) and pruritus (29%) occurred most commonly with MVC + BOC, and fatigue (46%) and headache (31%) with MVC + TVR. There were no serious adverse events. Conclusions:MVC exposures were significantly increased with BOC or TVR, therefore MVC should be dosed at 150 mg twice daily when coadministered with these newly approved hepatitis C protease inhibitors. No dose adjustment for BOC or TVR is warranted with MVC. MVC + BOC or TVR was generally well tolerated with no unexpected safety findings.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2013

Pharmacokinetic Interaction between Maraviroc and Fosamprenavir-Ritonavir: an Open-Label, Fixed-Sequence Study in Healthy Subjects

Manoli Vourvahis; Anna Plotka; Laure Mendes da Costa; Annie Fang; Jayvant Heera

ABSTRACT This open-label, fixed-sequence, phase 1 study evaluated the pharmacokinetic interaction between maraviroc (MVC) and ritonavir-boosted fosamprenavir (FPV/r) in healthy subjects. In period 1, subjects received 300 mg of MVC twice daily (BID; cohort 1) or once daily (QD; cohort 2) for 5 days. In period 2, cohort 1 subjects received 700/100 mg of FPV/r BID alone on days 1 to 10 and then FPV/r at 700/100 mg BID plus MVC at 300 mg BID on days 11 to 20; cohort 2 subjects received FPV/r at 1,400/100 mg QD alone on days 1 to 10 and then FPV/r at 1,400/100 mg QD plus MVC at 300 mg QD on days 11 to 20. Pharmacokinetic parameters, assessed on day 5 of period 1 and on days 10 and 20 of period 2, included the maximum plasma concentration (Cmax), the concentration at end of dosing interval (Cτ), and the area under the curve over dosing interval (AUCτ). Safety and tolerability were also assessed. MVC geometric mean AUCτ, Cmax, and Cτ were increased by 149, 52, and 374%, respectively, after BID dosing with FPV/r, and by 126, 45, and 80%, respectively, after QD dosing. Amprenavir (the active form of the prodrug fosamprenavir) and ritonavir exposures were decreased in the presence of MVC with amprenavir AUCτ, Cmax, and Cτ decreased by 34 to 36% in the presence of FPV/r plus maraviroc BID and by 15 to 30% with FPV/r plus MVC QD both compared to FPV/r alone. The overall all-causality adverse-event (AE) incidence rate was 96.4%; all AEs were of mild or moderate severity. Commonly reported treatment-related AEs (>20% of patients overall) included diarrhea, fatigue, abdominal discomfort, headache, and nausea. No serious AEs or deaths occurred. In summary, maraviroc exposure increased in the presence of FPV/r, whereas MVC coadministration decreased amprenavir and ritonavir exposures. MVC dosed at 300 mg BID with FPV/r is not recommended due to concerns of lower amprenavir exposures; however, no dose adjustment is warranted with MVC at 150 mg BID in combination with FPV/r based on the available clinical data. MVC plus FPV/r was generally well tolerated; no new safety signals were detected.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2013

Tigecycline Does Not Prolong Corrected QT Intervals in Healthy Subjects

Joan M. Korth-Bradley; Paul C. McGovern; Joanne Salageanu; Kyle Matschke; Anna Plotka; Sylvester Pawlak

ABSTRACT We evaluated the effect of tigecycline (50-mg and 200-mg doses) on corrected QT (QTc) intervals and assessed safety and tolerability in a randomized, placebo-controlled, four-period crossover study of 48 (44 male) healthy volunteers aged 22 to 53 years. Fed subjects received tigecycline (50 mg or 200 mg) or placebo in a blinded fashion or an open-label oral dose of moxifloxacin (400 mg) after 1 liter of intravenous fluid. Serial electrocardiograms were recorded before, and for 96 h after, dosing. Blood samples for tigecycline pharmacokinetics were collected after each recording. QTc intervals were corrected using Fridericias correction (QTcF). Pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated using noncompartmental methods with potential relationships examined using linear mixed-effects modeling. Adverse events were recorded. The upper limits of the 90% confidence interval for the mean difference between both tigecycline doses and placebo for all time-matched QTcF interval changes from baseline were <5 ms. The tigecycline concentrations initially declined rapidly and then more slowly. In the group given 50 mg of tigecycline, the pharmacokinetic parameters and means were as follows: maximum concentration of drug in serum (Cmax), 432 ng/ml; area under the concentration-time curve from time zero extrapolated to infinity (AUC0–∞), 2,366 ng · h/ml; clearance (CL), 21.1 liters/h; volume of distribution at steady state (Vss), 610 liters; and terminal half-life (t1/2), 22.1 h. Proportional or similar values were found for the group given 200 mg of tigecycline. Linear mixed-effects modeling failed to show an effect on QTcF values by tigecycline concentrations (P = 0.755). Tigecycline does not prolong the QTc interval in healthy subjects. This study has been registered at ClinicalTrials.gov under registration no. NCT01287793.


Journal of Human Lactation | 2016

The Pharmacokinetics of Pregabalin in Breast Milk, Plasma, and Urine of Healthy Postpartum Women.

Peter Lockwood; Lynne Pauer; Joseph M. Scavone; Maud Allard; Laure Mendes da Costa; Tanja Alebic-Kolbah; Anna Plotka; Christine Alvey; Marci L. Chew

Background: Limited data exist on the presence of pregabalin in human breast milk of nursing mothers. Objectives: This study aimed to determine pregabalin concentrations in breast milk, estimate the infant daily pregabalin dose from nursing mothers, and evaluate pregabalin pharmacokinetic data in lactating women (≥ 12 weeks postpartum). Methods: In this multiple-dose, open-label, pharmacokinetic study, 4 doses of pregabalin 150 mg were administered orally at 12-hour intervals. Urine, blood, and breast milk samples were collected up to 12, 24, and 48 hours, respectively, following the fourth dose. Pharmacokinetic parameters were estimated using noncompartmental methods. Adverse events were monitored throughout. Results: Ten healthy lactating women (age 24-37 years) received pregabalin. Geometric mean pregabalin Cmaxss and AUCτ values in breast milk were approximately 53% and 76%, respectively, of those for plasma. The mean amount of pregabalin in breast milk recovered in a 24-hour period after the last dose was 574 μg (range, 270-1720 μg), which is approximately 0.2% of the administered daily maternal dose of 300 mg. The estimated average daily infant dose of pregabalin from breast milk was 0.31 mg/kg/day, which would be approximately 7% (23% coefficient of variation) of the body weight normalized maternal dose. Approximately 89% of the dose administered was recovered in urine. Renal clearance averaged 68.2 mL/min. Adverse events were of mild or moderate severity. Conclusion: Lactation appears to have had little influence on pregabalin pharmacokinetics. Overall, the estimated dose of pregabalin in breastfed children of women receiving pregabalin is low. Pregabalin was well tolerated in lactating women. Declaration of Conflicting Interests The authors declared the following potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Peter A. Lockwood, Lynne Pauer, Joseph M. Scavone, Maud Allard, Laure Mendes da Costa, Tanja Alebic-Kolbah, Anna Plotka, Christine W. Alvey, and Marci L. Chew were all full-time employees of Pfizer at the time the study was completed and hold stock and/or stock options in Pfizer. Funding The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This study was sponsored by Pfizer, which was involved in the study design, the collection, analysis, and interpretation of the data, the writing of the report, and the decision to submit the paper for publication. Medical writing support was provided by Penny Gorringe, MSc, of Engage Scientific Solutions and funded by Pfizer.


Clinical pharmacology in drug development | 2015

Assessment of relative bioavailability of two presentations of moroctocog alfa (AF‐CC) in subjects with moderately severe or severe hemophilia A

Frank E. Shafer; Robert Charnigo; Anna Plotka; James Baumann; Yali Liang; Joan M. Korth-Bradley

An open‐label, single‐dose, randomized, two‐period, cross‐over study comparing the pharmacokinetics of factor VIII activity in plasma (FVIII:C) after administration of a new presentation of moroctocog alfa containing 3,000 IU in a dual‐chamber syringe and the combined contents of approved 1,000 and 2,000 IU vials was conducted in 16 male subjects who had moderately severe or severe hemophilia A (FVIII:C ≤2 IU/dL). Blood samples were collected for 72 hours after administration of the dose. FVIII:C were assayed using a chromogenic substrate assay in a central laboratory. The FVIII:C pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated using noncompartmental analysis. The dual‐chamber syringe would be bioequivalent to the combined contents of the vials if the 90% confidence limits of the ratio of the geometric mean values of AUCinf, and Cmax fell within the interval of 80–125%. The bioequivalence criteria were met. A total of seven treatment related adverse events were observed in a total of five subjects. All were mild and none was determined to be related to administration of study medication.


The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 2017

Lack of Effect of Rivipansel on QTc Interval in Healthy Adult African American Male Subjects

Brinda Tammara; Anna Plotka; Frank E. Shafer; David Robert John Readett; Steve Riley; Joan M. Korth-Bradley

Rivipansel is a pan‐selectin inhibitor in phase 3 development for the treatment of vaso‐occlusive crises in patients with sickle cell disease. This single‐dose, randomized, 3‐period, 3‐treatment (400 mg moxifloxacin open‐label, 4 g rivipansel–blinded, and placebo‐blinded) crossover study evaluated the effect of rivipansel on the QT/QTc interval in 48 healthy male African American subjects (age, 21–53 years; weight, 60–115 kg). Time‐matched, placebo‐adjusted change from baseline QT interval using Fridericias correction method (QTcF) was determined using a repeated‐measures mixed‐effects model. The highest upper bound of the 2‐sided 90% confidence interval (CI) for QTcF change was 3.22 milliseconds 3 hours postdose. Moxifloxacin showed the anticipated QTcF effect, indicating that the study had adequate sensitivity to detect changes in the QTcF interval. The study concluded that no QTcF effect was demonstrated with rivipansel compared with placebo, as the upper bound of the 2‐sided 90%CI was less than 10 milliseconds at all times. Exposure–response modeling for rivipansel concentrations and change from baseline in QTcF data corroborated a lack of effect with rivipansel compared with placebo. Single doses of rivipansel 4 g by intravenous infusion over 20 minutes were well tolerated in this study.


Clinical pharmacology in drug development | 2018

Comparative Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics of Bococizumab Following a Single Subcutaneous Injection Using Drug Substance Manufactured at Two Sites or Administration via Two Different Devices

Ellen Q. Wang; Anna Plotka; Joanne Salageanu; Daniel Baltrukonis; Khurshid Mridha; Robert Frederich; Beth Sullivan

The pharmacokinetics (PK) and pharmacodynamics (PD) of bococizumab, a proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) inhibitor, were compared following a single 150‐mg subcutaneous dose administered to healthy subjects (n = 156–158/arm) via: (1) a prefilled syringe (PFS) using drug substance (DS) manufactured by Pfizer, (2) a PFS using DS manufactured by Boehringer Ingelheim Pharma, (3) a prefilled pen using DS manufactured by Pfizer (NCT02458209). Blood samples were collected for 12 weeks postdose. Safety was monitored throughout. Mean maximum plasma concentration (Cmax) ranged between 11.0 and 11.3 μg/mL, and area under the plasma concentration‐time curve (AUCinf) ranged between 177.6 and 185.0 μg·day/mL across treatments. The 90% confidence intervals for the ratios of adjusted geometric means for Cmax and AUCinf fell within the 80%–125% range for both DS and delivery device comparisons. Comparable low‐density lipoprotein cholesterol profiles were observed, with nadir values of 54.3–56.1 mg/dL across treatments. Similar PCSK9 responses were also observed. Safety profiles were similar across treatments, and the majority of adverse events (AEs) were mild. Three subjects reported serious AEs. The most frequently reported AEs were headache, injection‐site reaction, and upper respiratory tract infection, with no clear differences across treatments. Comparable PK, PD, and safety were observed following a single bococizumab 150‐mg subcutaneous injection regardless of site of DS manufacture or delivery device used.


Clinical and Translational Science | 2018

Assessment of Relative Bioavailability of Moroctocog Alfa and Moroctocog Alfa (AF‐CC) in Subjects With Severe Hemophilia A

Joan M. Korth-Bradley; Jeremy Rupon; Anna Plotka; Robert Charnigo; Pablo Rendo

An open‐label, single‐dose, randomized, two‐period, crossover study comparing the pharmacokinetics of factor VIII activity in plasma (FVIII:C) after administration of an albumin‐free presentation of moroctocog alfa (test) and moroctocog alfa manufactured using the previous technique (reference) was conducted in 30 (25 evaluable) male subjects who had severe hemophilia A (FVIII:C < 1 IU/dL). Blood samples were collected for 48 h after administration of each dose. FVIII:C was assayed using a chromogenic substrate assay. The FVIII:C pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated using noncompartmental analysis. The presentations would be bioequivalent if the 90% confidence limits of the ratio of the geometric mean values of AUCinf and recovery fell within the interval of 80–125%. The bioequivalence criteria were met. A total of 10 treatment‐related adverse events were observed in a total of nine subjects. All were mild and none was determined to be related to administration of study medication.


Clinical pharmacology in drug development | 2017

Impact of Acid-Reducing Agents on the Pharmacokinetics of Palbociclib, a Weak Base With pH-Dependent Solubility, With Different Food Intake Conditions

Wan Sun; Karen J. Klamerus; Lisa M. Yuhas; Sylvester Pawlak; Anna Plotka; Melissa O'Gorman; Leonid Kirkovsky; Maha Kosa; Diane Wang

Palbociclib free base capsule is a weak base drug with highly pH‐dependent solubility. In vitro and in vivo studies evaluated the impact of acid‐reducing agents on exposure of palbociclib and determined whether the impact, if any, can be mitigated by food. A drug‐drug interaction study (study 1) was conducted first under fasted conditions and showed that coadministration of multiple doses of the proton‐pump inhibitor rabeprazole substantially reduced palbociclib mean area under the concentration‐time curve from time 0 to infinity and maximum observed plasma concentration by 62% and 80%, respectively. In vitro assessment suggested that the presence of bile salt mixed micelles to mimic the fed state can significantly enhance the solubility of palbociclib. Subsequently, study 2 was conducted under fed conditions and demonstrated that coadministration of rabeprazole decreased palbociclib maximum observed plasma concentration by 41% but had limited impact on area under the concentration‐time curve from 0 to infinity (13% decrease). This study also showed that the histamine‐2 receptor antagonist famotidine and local antacid with staggered dosing had no impact on palbociclib exposure under fed conditions. Food intake effectively mitigated the impact of acid‐reducing agents on palbociclib exposure. Palbociclib free base capsule should be taken with food, and acid‐reducing agent use does not need to be avoided.


Cancer Research | 2016

Abstract LB-229: A phase 1 open-label fixed-sequence two-period crossover study of the effect of multiple doses of tamoxifen on palbociclib (PD-0332991) pharmacokinetics in healthy male volunteers

Justin T. Hoffman; Melissa O'Gorman; Cho-Ming Loi; Anna Plotka; Tanya Boutros; Leonid Kirkovsky; Corrado Gallo Stampino; Diane Wang

Introduction: Tamoxifen and one of its primary active metabolites, 4‑hydroxy‑tamoxifen, are known to induce CYP3A4 in vitro, and in vivo coadministration of tamoxifen with letrozole and anastrozole (both CYP3A4 substrates) has resulted in decreased exposures (AUC) of each by 37% and 27%, respectively. The primary route of oxidative metabolism of palbociclib (PD‑0332991) is through CYP3A4, thus coadministration of tamoxifen and palbociclib could result in decreased exposure of palbociclib. The primary objective of this study is to estimate the relative exposure of single 125 mg palbociclib oral doses alone and in the presence of steady‑state concentrations of tamoxifen and its active metabolites (4‑hydroxy‑tamoxifen, N‑desmethyl‑tamoxifen, and endoxifen (N‑desmethyl‑4-hydroxytamoxifen)) in healthy male subjects in order to inform appropriate palbociclib dosing when administered in combination with tamoxifen in the upcoming Phase 3 PENELOPEB study. Methods: This was an open label, 2‑period fixed‑sequence study of the effect of multiple oral doses of tamoxifen on palbociclib pharmacokinetics in 25 healthy male volunteers. Each subject received a single 125 mg oral dose of palbociclib alone, followed by a single 125 mg dose of palbociclib on Day 22 of a 27-day tamoxifen loading dose regimen (60mg QD for 4 days, followed by 20mg QD for 23 days). Serial blood sampling for palbociclib pharmacokinetics was performed up to 144 hours post-palbociclib dose in both periods. Tamoxifen pre-dose blood sampling was performed on specified visits to document achievement of steady-state tamoxifen and metabolite concentrations. Plasma concentrations of palbociclib, tamoxifen, 4‑hydroxy‑tamoxifen, N‑desmethyl‑tamoxifen, and endoxifen were each measured using validated LC/MS/MS (liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry) methods. Palbociclib plasma pharmacokinetic (PK) parameters were estimated using standard non-compartmental methods. Discussion: There were no significant changes in the palbociclib plasma PK parameters AUCinf (area under the curve from time zero to infinity) and Cmax (maximal plasma concentration) in the presence of steady-state tamoxifen when compared to palbociclib alone. Tamoxifen, 4‑hydroxy‑tamoxifen, N‑desmethyl‑tamoxifen, and endoxifen all achieved steady-state prior to administration of palbociclib in period 2. In general, palbociclib and the combination of palbociclib and tamoxifen were well tolerated with no reported serious adverse events; 1 subject discontinued due to generalized itchiness which resolved with a single dose of fexofenadine. Citation Format: Justin T. Hoffman, Melissa O9Gorman, Cho-Ming Loi, Anna Plotka, Tanya Boutros, Leonid Kirkovsky, Corrado Gallo Stampino, Diane Wang. A phase 1 open-label fixed-sequence two-period crossover study of the effect of multiple doses of tamoxifen on palbociclib (PD-0332991) pharmacokinetics in healthy male volunteers. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 105th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2014 Apr 5-9; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2014;74(19 Suppl):Abstract nr LB-229. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2014-LB-229

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