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Dive into the research topics where Gopal Krishna is active.

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Featured researches published by Gopal Krishna.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2007

Treatment of Invasive Aspergillosis with Posaconazole in Patients Who Are Refractory to or Intolerant of Conventional Therapy: An Externally Controlled Trial

Thomas J. Walsh; Issam Raad; Thomas F. Patterson; Pranatharthi H. Chandrasekar; Gerald R. Donowitz; Richard J. Graybill; Reginald Greene; Ray Hachem; Susan Hadley; Raoul Herbrecht; Amelia Langston; Arnold Louie; Patricia Ribaud; Brahm H. Segal; David A. Stevens; Jo Anne Van Burik; Charles S. White; Gavin Corcoran; Jagadish Gogate; Gopal Krishna; Lisa D. Pedicone; Catherine Hardalo; John R. Perfect

BACKGROUNDnInvasive aspergillosis is an important cause of morbidity and mortality in immunocompromised patients. Current treatments provide limited benefit. Posaconazole is an extended-spectrum triazole with in vitro and in vivo activity against Aspergillus species.nnnMETHODSnWe investigated the efficacy and safety of posaconazole oral suspension (800 mg/day in divided doses) as monotherapy in an open-label, multicenter study in patients with invasive aspergillosis and other mycoses who were refractory to or intolerant of conventional antifungal therapy. Data from external control cases were collected retrospectively to provide a comparative reference group.nnnRESULTSnCases of aspergillosis deemed evaluable by a blinded data review committee included 107 posaconazole recipients and 86 control subjects (modified intent-to-treat population). The populations were similar and balanced with regard to prespecified demographic and disease variables. The overall success rate (i.e., the data review committee-assessed global response at the end of treatment) was 42% for posaconazole recipients and 26% for control subjects (odds ratio, 4.06; 95% confidence interval, 1.50-11.04; P=.006). The differences in response between the modified intent-to-treat treatment groups were preserved across additional, prespecified subsets, including infection site (pulmonary or disseminated), hematological malignancy, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, baseline neutropenia, and reason for enrollment (patient was refractory to or intolerant of previous antifungal therapy). An exposure-response relationship was suggested by pharmacokinetic analyses.nnnCONCLUSIONSnAlthough the study predates extensive use of echinocandins and voriconazole, these findings demonstrate that posaconazole is an alternative to salvage therapy for patients with invasive aspergillosis who are refractory to or intolerant of previous antifungal therapy.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2006

Pharmacokinetics, Safety, and Efficacy of Posaconazole in Patients with Persistent Febrile Neutropenia or Refractory Invasive Fungal Infection

Andrew J. Ullmann; Oliver A. Cornely; A. Burchardt; R. Hachem; D. P. Kontoyiannis; K. Töpelt; R. Courtney; D. Wexler; Gopal Krishna; Monika Martinho; G. Corcoran; Issam Raad

ABSTRACT The pharmacokinetic profiles, safety, and efficacies of different dosing schedules of posaconazole oral suspension in patients with possible, probable, and proven refractory invasive fungal infection (rIFI) or febrile neutropenia (FN) were evaluated in a multicenter, open-label, parallel-group study. Sixty-six patients with FN and 32 patients with rIFI were randomly assigned to one of three posaconazole regimens: 200 mg four times a day (q.i.d.) for nine doses, followed by 400 mg twice a day (b.i.d.); 400 mg q.i.d. for nine doses, followed by 600 mg b.i.d.; or 800 mg b.i.d. for five doses, followed by 800 mg once a day (q.d.). Therapy was continued for up to 6 months in patients with rIFI or until neutrophil recovery occurred in patients with FN. The 400-mg-b.i.d. dose provided the highest overall mean exposure, with 135% (P = 0.0004) and 182% (P < 0.0001) greater exposure than the 600-mg-b.i.d. and 800-mg-q.d. doses, respectively. However, exposure in allogeneic bone marrow transplant (BMT) recipients (n = 12) was 52% lower than in non-BMT patients. Treatment-related adverse events (occurring in 24% of patients) were mostly gastrointestinal in nature. Twenty-four percent of patients had adverse events leading to premature discontinuation (none were treatment related). In efficacy-evaluable patients, successful clinical response was observed in 43% with rIFI (56% of patients receiving 400 mg b.i.d., 17% receiving 600 mg b.i.d., and 50% receiving 800 mg q.d.) and 77% with FN (74% receiving 400 mg b.i.d., 78% receiving 600 mg b.i.d., and 81% receiving 800 mg q.d.). Posaconazole is well tolerated and absorbed. Divided doses of 800 mg (400 mg b.i.d.) provide the greatest posaconazole exposure.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2009

Pharmacokinetics and Absorption of Posaconazole Oral Suspension under Various Gastric Conditions in Healthy Volunteers

Gopal Krishna; Allen Moton; Lei Ma; Matthew Medlock; James McLeod

ABSTRACT A four-part, randomized, crossover study with healthy subjects evaluated the effects of gastric pH, the dosing frequency and prandial state, food consumption timing, and gastric motility on the absorption of posaconazole. In part 1, a single dose (SD) of posaconazole (400 mg) was administered alone or with an acidic beverage or a proton pump inhibitor (PPI), or both. In part 2, posaconazole (400 mg twice daily and 200 mg four times daily) was administered for 7 days with and without a nutritional supplement (Boost). In part 3, an SD of posaconazole (400 mg) was administered while the subjects were fasting and before, during, and after a high-fat meal. In part 4, an SD of posaconazole (400 mg) and the nutritional supplement were administered alone, with metoclopramide, and with loperamide. Compared to the results obtained with posaconazole alone, administration with an acidic beverage increased the posaconazole maximum concentration in plasma (Cmax) and the area under the concentration-time curve (AUC) by 92% and 70%, respectively, whereas a higher gastric pH decreased the posaconazole Cmax and AUC by 46% and 32%, respectively. Compared to the results obtained with posaconazole alone, posaconazole at 400 mg or at 200 mg plus the nutritional supplement increased the posaconazole Cmax and AUC by 65% and 66%, respectively, and by up to 137% and 161%, respectively. Administration before a high-fat meal increased the Cmax and the AUC by 96% and 111%, respectively, while administration during and after the meal increased the Cmax and the AUC by up to 339% and 387%, respectively. Increased gastric motility decreased the Cmax and the AUC by 21% and 19%, respectively. Strategies to maximize posaconazole exposure in patients with absorption difficulties include administration with or after a high-fat meal, with any meal or nutritional supplement, with an acidic beverage, or in divided doses and the avoidance of proton pump inhibitors.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2004

Pharmacodynamics of a New Triazole, Posaconazole, in a Murine Model of Disseminated Candidiasis

D. Andes; K. Marchillo; R. Conklin; Gopal Krishna; Farkad Ezzet; Anthony Cacciapuoti; David Loebenberg

ABSTRACT Previous in vivo studies have characterized the pharmacodynamic characteristics of two triazole compounds, fluconazole and ravuconazole. These investigations demonstrated that the 24-h area under the concentration-time curve (AUC)/MIC ratio is the critical pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic (PK-PD) parameter associated with treatment efficacy. Further analysis demonstrated that a free-drug triazole 24-h AUC/MIC ratio of 20 to 25 was predictive of treatment success in both experimental models and clinical trials. We used a neutropenic murine model of disseminated Candida albicans infection to similarly characterize the time course activity of the new triazole, posaconazole. The PK-PD parameters (percent time above MIC, AUC/MIC ratio, and peak serum drug level/MIC ratio) were correlated with in vivo efficacy, as measured by organism number in kidney cultures after 48 h of therapy. Kinetics and protein binding following oral posaconazole dosing were performed in neutropenic infected mice. Peak levels and AUC from 0 h to ∞ values were nonlinear over the 16-fold dose range studied. Serum drug elimination half-life ranged from 12.0 to 17.7 h. Protein binding was 99%. Single dose postantifungal effect studies demonstrated prolonged suppression of organism regrowth after serum posaconazole levels had fallen below the MIC. Treatment efficacy with the four dosing intervals studied was similar, supporting the AUC/MIC ratio as the PK-PD parameter predictive of efficacy. Nonlinear regression analysis also suggested that the AUC/MIC ratio was strongly predictive of treatment outcomes (AUC/MIC ratio R2 = 83%; peak serum drug/MIC ratio R2 = 85%; time that serum levels of posaconazole remained above the MIC R2 = 65%). Similar studies were conducted with 11 additional C. albicans isolates with various posaconazole susceptibilities (MIC, 0.015 to 0.12 μg/ml) to determine if a similar 24-h AUC/MIC ratio was associated with efficacy. The posaconazole free-drug AUC/MIC ratios were similar for all of the organisms studied (6.12 to 26.7, mean ± SD = 16.9 ± 7.8, P value, 0.42). These free-drug AUC/MIC ratios are similar to those observed for other triazoles in this model.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2007

Posaconazole Plasma Concentrations in Juvenile Patients with Invasive Fungal Infection

Gopal Krishna; Angela Sansone-Parsons; Monika Martinho; Bhavna Kantesaria; Lisa D. Pedicone

ABSTRACT Posaconazole is an orally bioavailable triazole antifungal agent for the treatment and prophylaxis of invasive fungal infection. We evaluated plasma posaconazole concentration data from juvenile (younger than 18 years; n = 12) and adult (18 to 64 years; n = 194) patients who participated in a multicenter, phase 3, open-label study that assessed the efficacy and safety of posaconazole treatment for persons who were intolerant of or had invasive fungal infection refractory to standard antifungal therapies. With the exception of one juvenile patient who received 400 mg/day as a divided dose on the day of sample collection, all patients received posaconazole at 800 mg/day as an oral suspension in divided doses. Plasma samples were analyzed through a validated liquid chromatographic-tandem mass spectrometric method with a lower limit of quantitation of 1 ng/ml. Because plasma posaconazole concentrations are relatively constant at steady state, the average of all plasma concentrations (Cav) for each patient was calculated to provide a single steady-state plasma posaconazole concentration. A blinded data review committee reviewed all treatment outcomes. Variable posaconazole plasma concentrations were observed within both the juvenile and adult populations. Mean (median [range]) Cav values for juvenile and adult patients were 776 ng/ml (579 ng/ml [85.3 to 2,891 ng/ml]) and 817 ng/ml (626 ng/ml [0 to 3,710 ng/ml]), respectively. Overall success rates and adverse event profiles were comparable. In conclusion, posaconazole concentrations in plasma were similar for juvenile and adult patients, suggesting that clinical outcomes are expected to be similar in adults and children with refractory invasive fungal infection.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2006

Pharmacokinetics and Safety of Oral Posaconazole in Neutropenic Stem Cell Transplant Recipients

Paul O. Gubbins; Gopal Krishna; Angela Sansone-Parsons; Scott R. Penzak; Li Dong; Monika Martinho; Elias Anaissie

ABSTRACT The pharmacokinetics of posaconazole oral suspension in neutropenic patients undergoing high-dose chemotherapy and stem cell transplantation were evaluated, and the association of plasma posaconazole exposure with the presence and severity of oral mucositis was explored in this nonrandomized, open-label, parallel-group, multiple-dose pharmacokinetic study. Thirty patients were enrolled and received one of three regimens (group I, 200 mg once daily; group II, 400 mg once daily; group III, 200 mg four times daily) for the duration of neutropenia. The mean total exposure for day 1, as shown by the area under the concentration-time curve from 0 to 24 h (AUC0-24), was 1.96 mg · h/liter in group I and was 51% higher in group II and in group III. Increases in AUC0-24 and maximum plasma concentration (Cmax) in groups II and III were dose related. The AUC0-24 and Cmax values on day 1 were similar between groups II and III. There was interpatient variability of up to 68% in the pharmacokinetic values for our study population. Steady state was attained by days 5 to 6. Average steady-state plasma posaconazole trough values were 192, 219, and 414 ng/ml in groups I, II, and III, respectively. The AUC0-24 and apparent oral clearance increased by increasing dose and dosing frequency. Mucositis appeared to reduce exposure but did not significantly affect mean total posaconazole exposure (AUC and Cmax) at steady state (P = 0.1483). Moreover, this reduction could be overcome by increasing the total dose and dosing frequency. Posaconazole was safe and well tolerated.


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2012

A new solid oral tablet formulation of posaconazole: a randomized clinical trial to investigate rising single- and multiple-dose pharmacokinetics and safety in healthy volunteers

Gopal Krishna; Lei Ma; Monika Martinho; Richard A. Preston; Edward O'Mara

Objectives Posaconazole is an extended-spectrum triazole with proven efficacy as antifungal treatment and prophylaxis. The marketed oral suspension should be taken with food to maximize systemic absorption. A new solid oral tablet has been developed with improved bioavailability that can be administered without regard to food. The aim of this study was to evaluate rising single- and multiple-dose pharmacokinetics, safety and tolerability of the new tablet. Methods This was a single-centre, randomized, placebo-controlled, Phase I, rising single- and multiple-dose study of healthy subjects aged 18–65 years who received a posaconazole tablet as 200 mg once daily, 200 mg twice daily or 400 mg once daily. The 24 subjects were studied in two cohorts of 12 subjects each (9 active and 3 placebo). Results After single or multiple oral dose administration of posaconazole tablets (200 and 400 mg), exposure increased in a dose-related manner. Peak posaconazole concentrations were attained at a median Tmax of 4–5 h. Mean half-life was similar for 200 and 400 mg posaconazole doses (25 and 26 h). The accumulation ratio upon multiple doses over 8 days was ∼3 for 200 and 400 mg once daily and ∼5 for 200 mg twice daily. Cavg values exceeded 1300 ng/mL. The posaconazole oral tablet was safe and well tolerated, although mild, transient elevations in liver function were reported in some patients. Conclusions Posaconazole exposure increased in a dose-related manner. The pharmacokinetics of this new solid oral tablet of posaconazole supports the clinical evaluation of once-daily dosing regimens for fungal infections.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2006

Effect of a nutritional supplement on posaconazole pharmacokinetics following oral administration to healthy volunteers.

Angela Sansone-Parsons; Gopal Krishna; Angela Calzetta; David Wexler; Bhavna Kantesaria; Mitchell Rosenberg; Marc Saltzman

ABSTRACT We conducted a randomized, crossover study in healthy adults to examine the effects of a nutritional supplement (Boost Plus) on posaconazole pharmacokinetics. In this study, coadministration of posaconazole with Boost Plus increased the maximum concentration of posaconazole in serum and area under the concentration-time curve from 0 to 72 h values 3.4- and 2.6-fold, respectively, compared to those for the fasted state.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2012

Single-Dose Phase I Study To Evaluate the Pharmacokinetics of Posaconazole in New Tablet and Capsule Formulations Relative to Oral Suspension

Gopal Krishna; Lei Ma; Monika Martinho; Edward O'Mara

ABSTRACT Posaconazole oral suspension, a marketed extended-spectrum triazole with proven efficacy as antifungal treatment and prophylaxis, should be taken with food to maximize absorption. New tablet and capsule formulations have been developed in an attempt to optimize absorption and bioavailability. The aims of this exploratory open-label, partially randomized, 2-part, 4-way, single-dose crossover study in 16 healthy adults were to characterize pharmacokinetics for posaconazole tablet and capsule formulations relative to those for posaconazole oral suspension under fasted and fed conditions and to assess safety and tolerability. Under fasted conditions, posaconazole exposures (area under the curve [AUC]) for the tablet and capsule formulations were similar (mean AUC from time zero to infinity [AUC0–∞], tablet A, 11,700 ng · h/ml [coefficient of variation {CV}, 26%]; tablet B, 11,300 ng · h/ml [CV, 22%]; capsule, 11,000 ng · h/ml [CV, 25%]) and were substantially higher than the exposure for the oral suspension (mean AUC0–∞, 3,420 ng · h/ml [CV, 44%]). Tablets and capsule showed less variability in exposure than the oral suspension. In fed subjects, tablets and capsule resulted in similar AUC values (mean AUC0–∞, tablet A, 11,900 ng · h/ml [23%]; tablet B, 12,400 ng · h/ml [CV, 25%]; capsule, 12,300 ng · h/ml [CV, 28%]) and slightly higher exposure than the oral suspension (mean AUC0–∞, 8,750 [CV, 24%]). Median times to the maximum concentration of drug in plasma were 4 to 5 h (fasted conditions) and 6 to 8 h (fed conditions). Mean half-lives values were similar for all formulations under fed and fasted conditions (23.1 to 29.2 h). Consistent with previous data, exposure for the oral suspension increased 2.5- to 3-fold when it was given with a high-fat meal. Conversely, exposures for tablets and capsule were not markedly affected by food. All formulations of posaconazole at 100 mg were safe and well tolerated.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2014

Posaconazole Tablet Pharmacokinetics: Lack of Effect of Concomitant Medications Altering Gastric pH and Gastric Motility in Healthy Subjects

Walter K. Kraft; Peter S. Chang; Marlou L. P. S. van Iersel; Hetty Waskin; Gopal Krishna; Wendy M. Kersemaekers

ABSTRACT Posaconazole oral suspension is an extended-spectrum triazole that should be taken with food to maximize absorption. A new posaconazole tablet formulation has demonstrated improved bioavailability over the oral suspension in healthy adults in a fasting state. This study evaluated the effects of concomitant medications altering gastric pH (antacid, ranitidine, and esomeprazole) and gastric motility (metoclopramide) on the pharmacokinetics of posaconazole tablets. This was a prospective open-label 5-way crossover study in 20 healthy volunteers. In each treatment period, a single 400-mg dose (4 100-mg tablets) of posaconazole was administered alone or with 20 ml antacid (2 g of aluminum hydroxide and 2 g of magnesium hydroxide), ranitidine (150 mg), esomeprazole (40 mg), or metoclopramide (15 mg). There was a ≥10-day washout between treatment periods. Posaconazole exposure, time to maximum concentration of drug in serum (Tmax), and apparent terminal half-life (t1/2) were similar when posaconazole was administered alone or with medications affecting gastric pH and gastric motility. Geometric mean ratios (90% confidence intervals [CIs]) of the area under the concentration-time curve from time zero to infinity (AUC0–inf) (posaconazole with medications affecting gastric pH and gastric motility versus posaconazole alone) were 1.03 (0.88–1.20) with antacid, 0.97 (0.84–1.12) with ranitidine, 1.01 (0.87–1.17) with esomeprazole, and 0.93 (0.79–1.09) with metoclopramide. Geometric mean ratios (90% CIs) of the maximum concentration of drug in serum (Cmax) were 1.06 (0.90–1.26) with antacid, 1.04 (0.88–1.23) with ranitidine, 1.05 (0.89–1.24) with esomeprazole, and 0.86 (0.73–1.02) with metoclopramide. In summary, in healthy volunteers, the pharmacokinetics of a single 400-mg dose of posaconazole tablets was not altered to a clinically meaningful extent when posaconazole was administered alone or with medications affecting gastric pH or gastric motility.

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John A. Wagner

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

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