Richard Anthony Brigandi
GlaxoSmithKline
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Featured researches published by Richard Anthony Brigandi.
American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 2016
Richard Anthony Brigandi; Brendan M. Johnson; Coreen Oei; Mark Westerman; Gordana Olbina; Janak de Zoysa; Simon D. Roger; Manisha Sahay; Nicholas B. Cross; Lawrence P. McMahon; Veerabhadra Guptha; Elena A. Smolyarchuk; Narinder Singh; Steven F. Russ; Sanjay Kumar; Alexey V. Borsukov; Vyacheslav V. Marasaev; Gullipalli Prasad; Galina Y. Timokhovskaya; Elena V. Kolmakova; Vladimir A. Dobronravov; Elena Zakharova; Georgi Abraham; David Packham; Dmitry A. Zateyshchikov; Gregory P. Arutyunov; Galina V. Volgina; Kirill S. Lipatov; Dmitry V. Perlin; Bruce A. Cooper
BACKGROUND Anemia associated with chronic kidney disease (CKD) often requires treatment with recombinant human erythropoietin (EPO). Hypoxia-inducible factor-prolyl hydroxylase inhibitors (PHIs) stimulate endogenous EPO synthesis and induce effective erythropoiesis by non-EPO effects. GSK1278863 is an orally administered small-molecule PHI. STUDY DESIGN Multicenter, single-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel-group study. SETTING & PARTICIPANTS Anemic non-dialysis-dependent patients with CKD stages 3-5 (CKD-3/4/5 group; n=70) and anemic hemodialysis patients with CKD stage 5D (CKD-5D group; n=37). INTERVENTIONS Patients with CKD-3/4/5 received placebo or GSK1278863 (10, 25, 50, or 100mg), and patients with CKD-5D received placebo or GSK1278863 (10 or 25mg) once daily for 28 days. OUTCOMES & MEASUREMENTS Primary pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic (increase and response rates in achieving the target hemoglobin [Hb] concentration, plasma EPO concentrations, reticulocyte count, and others]) and safety and tolerability end points were obtained. RESULTS Both CKD-3/4/5 and CKD-5D populations showed a dose-dependent increase in EPO concentrations and consequent increases in reticulocytes and Hb levels. Percentages of GSK1278863 participants with an Hb level increase > 1.0g/dL (CKD-3/4/5) and >0.5g/dL (CKD-5D) were 63% to 91% and 71% to 89%, respectively. Per-protocol-defined criteria, high rate of increase in Hb level, or high absolute Hb value was the main cause for withdrawal (CKD-3/4/5, 30%; CKD-5D, 22%). A dose-dependent decrease in hepcidin levels and increase in total and unsaturated iron binding were observed in all GSK1278863-treated patients. LIMITATIONS Sparse pharmacokinetic sampling may have limited covariate characterization. EPO concentrations at the last pharmacodynamic sample (5-6 hours) postdose may not represent peak concentrations, which occurred 8 to 10 hours postdose in previous studies. Patients were not stratified by diabetes status, potentially confounding vascular endothelial growth factor and glucose analyses. CONCLUSIONS GSK1278863 induced an effective EPO response and stimulated non-EPO mechanisms for erythropoiesis in anemic non-dialysis-dependent and dialysis-dependent patients with CKD.
Blood | 2014
Andrew Spencer; Sung-Soo Yoon; Simon J. Harrison; Shannon R. Morris; Deborah A. Smith; Richard Anthony Brigandi; Jennifer Gauvin; Rakesh Kumar; Joanna B. Opalinska; Christine Chen
The PI3K/AKT pathway is constitutively active in hematologic malignancies, providing proliferative and antiapoptotic signals and possibly contributing to drug resistance. We conducted an open-label phase 1 study to evaluate the maximum tolerated dose (MTD), safety, pharmacokinetics, and clinical activity of afuresertib-an oral AKT inhibitor-in patients with advanced hematologic malignancies. Seventy-three patients were treated at doses ranging from 25 to 150 mg per day. The MTD was established at 125 mg per day because of 2 dose-limiting toxicities in the 150-mg cohort (liver function test abnormalities). The most frequent adverse events were nausea (35.6%), diarrhea (32.9%), and dyspepsia (24.7%). Maximum plasma concentrations and area under the plasma concentration-time curves from time 0 to 24 hours were generally dose proportional at > 75-mg doses; the median time to peak plasma concentrations was 1.5 to 2.5 hours post dose, with a half-life of approximately 1.7 days. Three multiple myeloma patients attained partial responses; an additional 3 attained minimal responses. Clinical activity was also observed in non-Hodgkin lymphoma, Langerhans cell histiocytosis, and Hodgkin disease. Single-agent afuresertib showed a favorable safety profile and demonstrated clinical activity against hematologic malignancies, including multiple myeloma.
Clinical pharmacology in drug development | 2015
Richard Anthony Brigandi; Steven F. Russ; Chantal M. Petit; Brendan M. Johnson; Scott R Croy; Peter Hodsman; Fran X. Muller
Vestipitant is a potent and selective neurokinin 1 (NK‐1) receptor antagonist that was investigated as a potential treatment for post‐operative nausea and vomiting (PONV). A previous mannitol‐based formulation of vestipitant was associated with hemolytic activity in preclinical studies. In an effort to reduce the hemolytic potential and develop an IV formulation of vestipitant that could be administered more rapidly, an IV formulation containing sulfobutylether‐7‐beta‐cyclodextrin (SBE7‐β‐CD, Captisol™) was developed and tested in a phase 1 clinical study. This was a randomized, single‐blind (subjects and investigator—blinded, sponsor‐unblinded), placebo controlled, dose escalation study in healthy subjects in which 7 cohorts of 8 subjects per cohort received SBE7‐β‐CD ‐based vestipitant (2 mg/mL) or placebo (saline) in a 3:1 ratio (active:placebo) at different doses and infusion rates. The results demonstrated the ability to infuse up to 48 mg vestipitant in a 2 mg/mL formulation over 30 seconds with no evidence of hemolytic effects. Cohorts of subjects at lower doses and longer infusion duration (>1 minute) reported more AEs related to the infusion site than those at the higher doses and faster infusion rates.
Current Opinion in Pharmacology | 2004
Andrew I. Bayliffe; Richard Anthony Brigandi; H. Jeffrey Wilkins; Mark Levick
Blood | 2011
Andrew Spencer; Sung-Soo Yoon; Simon J. Harrison; Shannon R. Morris; Deborah A. Smith; Steven J. Freedman; Richard Anthony Brigandi; Allen Oliff; Joanna B. Opalinska; Christine Chen
Archive | 2006
Richard Anthony Brigandi; Mark Levick; William Henry Miller
Archive | 2006
Richard Anthony Brigandi; Mark Levick; William Henry Miller
Archive | 2006
Richard Anthony Brigandi; Mark Levick; William Henry Miller
Archive | 2006
Richard Anthony Brigandi; Mark Levick; William Henry Miller
Archive | 2006
Richard Anthony Brigandi; Mark Levick; William Henry Miller