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Dive into the research topics where Thorsten Lehr is active.

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Featured researches published by Thorsten Lehr.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2014

The effect of dabigatran plasma concentrations and patient characteristics on the frequency of ischemic stroke and major bleeding in atrial fibrillation patients: the RE-LY Trial (Randomized Evaluation of Long-Term Anticoagulation Therapy).

Paul A. Reilly; Thorsten Lehr; Sebastian Haertter; Stuart J. Connolly; Salim Yusuf; John W. Eikelboom; Michael D. Ezekowitz; Gerhard Nehmiz; Susan Wang; Lars Wallentin

OBJECTIVES The goal of this study was to analyze the impact of dabigatran plasma concentrations, patient demographics, and aspirin (ASA) use on frequencies of ischemic strokes/systemic emboli and major bleeds in atrial fibrillation patients. BACKGROUND The efficacy and safety of dabigatran etexilate were demonstrated in the RE-LY (Randomized Evaluation of Long-Term Anticoagulation Therapy) trial, but a therapeutic concentration range has not been defined. METHODS In a pre-specified analysis of RE-LY, plasma concentrations of dabigatran were determined in patients treated with dabigatran etexilate 110 mg twice daily (bid) or 150 mg bid and correlated with the clinical outcomes of ischemic stroke/systemic embolism and major bleeding using univariate and multivariate logistic regression and Cox regression models. Patient demographics and ASA use were assessed descriptively and as covariates. RESULTS Plasma concentrations were obtained from 9,183 patients, with 112 ischemic strokes/systemic emboli (1.3%) and 323 major bleeds (3.8%) recorded. Dabigatran levels were dependent on renal function, age, weight, and female sex, but not ethnicity, geographic region, ASA use, or clopidogrel use. A multiple logistic regression model (c-statistic 0.657, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.61 to 0.71) showed that the risk of ischemic events was inversely related to trough dabigatran concentrations (p = 0.045), with age and previous stroke (both p < 0.0001) as significant covariates. Multiple logistic regression (c-statistic 0.715, 95% CI: 0.69 to 0.74) showed major bleeding risk increased with dabigatran exposure (p < 0.0001), age (p < 0.0001), ASA use (p < 0.0003), and diabetes (p = 0.018) as significant covariates. CONCLUSIONS Ischemic stroke and bleeding outcomes were correlated with dabigatran plasma concentrations. Age was the most important covariate. Individual benefit-risk might be improved by tailoring dabigatran dose after considering selected patient characteristics. (Randomized Evaluation of Long Term Anticoagulant Therapy [RE-LY] With Dabigatran Etexilate; NCT00262600).


Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2011

Population pharmacokinetic analysis of the oral thrombin inhibitor dabigatran etexilate in patients with non-valvular atrial fibrillation from the RE-LY trial.

K-H Liesenfeld; Thorsten Lehr; C. Dansirikul; Paul A. Reilly; Stuart J. Connolly; Michael D. Ezekowitz; Salim Yusuf; Lars Wallentin; Sebastian Haertter; Alexander Staab

Summary.  Background: Dabigatran etexilate (DE) is an orally absorbed prodrug of dabigatran, a thrombin inhibitor that exerts potent anticoagulant and antithrombotic activity. Objectives: To characterize the pharmacokinetics of dabigatran in patients with non‐valvular atrial fibrillation (AF) from the Randomized Evaluation of Long‐term Anticoagulant Therapy (RE‐LY) trial and to quantify the effect of selected factors on pharmacokinetic (PK) model parameters. Patients and methods: A total of 27 706 dabigatran plasma concentrations from 9522 patients who received DE 110 or 150 mg twice daily were analyzed with non‐linear mixed‐effects modeling. Results: The pharmacokinetics of dabigatran were best described by a two‐compartment disposition model with first‐order absorption. The covariates creatinine clearance (CRCL), age, sex, heart failure and the ethnic subgroup ‘South Asian’ exhibited statistically significant effects on apparent clearance of dabigatran. Body weight and hemoglobin significantly influenced the apparent volume of distribution of the central compartment. Concomitant medication with proton‐pump inhibitors, amiodarone and verapamil significantly affected the bioavailability. However, all of the statistically significant factors that were identified, except for renal function status, showed only small to moderate effects (< 26% change in exposure at steady state). On the basis of simulations from the final population PK model, a dose of 75 mg twice daily would result in similar exposure for severely renally impaired patients with CRCL of 15–30 mL min−1 and patients with normal renal function receiving 150 mg twice daily. Conclusions: The analysis provides a thorough PK characterization of dabigatran in the AF patient population from RE‐LY. None of the covariates investigated, with the exception of renal function, warrants dose adjustment.


Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2013

Effective elimination of dabigatran by haemodialysis. A phase I single-centre study in patients with end-stage renal disease.

Dmytro Khadzhynov; Frank Wagner; Stephan Formella; Erol Wiegert; Viktoria Moschetti; Torsten Slowinski; Hans-H. Neumayer; Karl-Heinz Liesenfeld; Thorsten Lehr; Sebastian Härtter; Jeffrey Friedman; Harm Peters; Andreas Clemens

Dabigatran, a specific, reversible direct thrombin inhibitor, is used to prevent ischaemic and haemorrhagic strokes in patients with atrial fibrillation. As with every anticoagulant, there is a need to rapidly reverse its effects in emergency situations. In an open-label, single-centre phase I study with two fixed multiple dosing periods, we investigated the pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and safety of dabigatran before, during and after 4 hour haemodialysis sessions with either 200 or 400 ml/min targeted blood flow in seven end-stage renal disease patients without atrial fibrillation. Dabigatran was administered over three days in a regimen designed to achieve peak plasma concentrations comparable to those observed in atrial fibrillation patients receiving 150 mg b.i.d. and to attain adequate distribution of dabigatran in the central and peripheral compartments. Plasma concentration-time profiles were similar in both periods on Day 3 (Cmax: 176 and 159 ng/ml). Four hours of haemodialysis removed 48.8% and 59.3% of total dabigatran from the central compartment with 200 and 400 ml/minute targeted blood flow, respectively. The anticoagulant activity of dabigatran was linearly related to its plasma levels. There was a minor redistribution of dabigatran (<16%) after the end of the haemodialysis session. In conclusion, a 4 hour haemodialysis session can rapidly eliminate a substantial amount of dabigatran from the central compartment with a concomitant marked reduction in its anticoagulant activity. There was a clinically negligible redistribution of dabigatran after haemodialysis. These results demonstrate that haemodialysis can be a suitable approach to eliminate dabigatran in emergency situations.


American Heart Journal | 2012

A comparison of dabigatran etexilate with warfarin in patients with mechanical heart valves: THE Randomized, phase II study to evaluate the safety and pharmacokinetics of oral dabigatran etexilate in patients after heart valve replacement (RE-ALIGN).

Frans Van de Werf; Martina Brueckmann; Stuart J. Connolly; Jeffrey Friedman; Christopher B. Granger; Sebastian Härtter; Ruth Harper; Arie Pieter Kappetein; Thorsten Lehr; Michael J. Mack; Herbert Noack; John W. Eikelboom

BACKGROUND Vitamin K antagonists are the only oral anticoagulants approved for long-term treatment of patients with a cardiac valve replacement. OBJECTIVE This study aims to test a new dosing regimen for dabigatran etexilate in patients with a mechanical bileaflet valve. METHODS Patients aged ≥ 18 years and ≤ 75 years, either undergoing implantation of a mechanical bileaflet valve (aortic or mitral or both) during the current hospital stay or having undergone implantation a mitral bileaflet valve >3 months before randomization, will be randomized between dabigatran etexilate or warfarin (in a ratio of 2:1) in an open-label design. Initial doses of dabigatran will be based on the estimated creatinine clearance, and the doses will be adjusted based on measuring trough dabigatran plasma levels to achieve levels ≥ 50 ng/mL at steady state. Doses will range between 150 mg twice a day and 300 mg twice a day. Warfarin management and target international normalized ratio will be according to current practice guidelines at the discretion of the treating physicians. The plan is to treat 270 patients with dabigatran etexilate for a total study population of approximately 405 patients. Clinical efficacy and safety outcomes will be analyzed in an exploratory manner. CONCLUSIONS RE-ALIGN is the first study to test an alternative to warfarin in patients with mechanical heart valves. A definitive phase III study will be planned based on the results of this study.


Circulation | 2013

Genetic Determinants of Dabigatran Plasma Levels and Their Relation to Bleeding

Guillaume Paré; Niclas Eriksson; Thorsten Lehr; Stuart J. Connolly; John W. Eikelboom; Michael D. Ezekowitz; Tomas Axelsson; Sebastian Haertter; Jonas Oldgren; Paul A. Reilly; Agneta Siegbahn; Ann-Christine Syvänen; Claes Wadelius; Mia Wadelius; Heike Zimdahl-Gelling; Salim Yusuf; Lars Wallentin

Background— Fixed-dose unmonitored treatment with dabigatran etexilate is effective and has a favorable safety profile in the prevention of stroke in atrial fibrillation patients compared with warfarin. We hypothesized that genetic variants could contribute to interindividual variability in blood concentrations of the active metabolite of dabigatran etexilate and influence the safety and efficacy of dabigatran. Methods and Results— We successfully conducted a genome-wide association study in 2944 Randomized Evaluation of Long-term Anticoagulation Therapy (RE-LY) participants. The CES1 single-nucleotide polymorphism rs2244613 was associated with trough concentrations, and the ABCB1 single-nucleotide polymorphism rs4148738 and the CES1 single-nucleotide polymorphism rs8192935 were associated with peak concentrations at genome-wide significance (P<9×10−8) with a gene-dose effect. Each minor allele of the CES1 single-nucleotide polymorphism rs2244613 was associated with lower trough concentrations (15% decrease per allele; 95% confidence interval, 10–19; P=1.2×10−8) and a lower risk of any bleeding (odds ratio, 0.67; 95% confidence interval, 0.55–0.82; P=7×10−5) in dabigatran-treated participants, with a consistent but nonsignificant lower risk of major bleeding (odds ratio, 0.66; 95% confidence interval, 0.43–1.01). The interaction between treatment (warfarin versus all dabigatran) and carrier status was statistically significant (P=0.002), with carriers having less bleeding with dabigatran than warfarin (hazard ratio, 0.59; 95% confidence interval, 0.46–0.76; P=5.2×10−5) in contrast to no difference in noncarriers (hazard ratio, 0.96; 95% confidence interval, 0.81–1.14; P=0.65). There was no association with ischemic events, and neither rs4148738 nor rs8192935 was associated with bleeding or ischemic events. Conclusions— Genome-wide association analysis identified that carriage of the CES1 rs2244613 minor allele occurred in 32.8% of patients in RE-LY and was associated with lower exposure to active dabigatran metabolite. The presence of the polymorphism was associated with a lower risk of bleeding. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00262600.


Journal of Hepatology | 2016

Treatment of chronic hepatitis D with the entry inhibitor myrcludex B: First results of a phase Ib/IIa study

Pavel Bogomolov; A. Alexandrov; Natalia Voronkova; Maria Macievich; Ksenia Y. Kokina; Maria Petrachenkova; Thorsten Lehr; Florian A. Lempp; Heiner Wedemeyer; Mathias Haag; Matthias Schwab; Walter E. Haefeli; Antje Blank; Stephan Urban

BACKGROUND & AIMS The therapeutic option for patients with chronic hepatitis delta virus infection (CHD) is limited to interferon alpha with rare curative outcome. Myrcludex B is a first-in-class entry inhibitor inactivating the hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis D virus (HDV) receptor sodium taurocholate co-transporting polypeptide. We report the interim results of a pilot trial on chronically infected HDV patients treated with myrcludex B, or pegylated interferon alpha (PegIFNα-2a) or their combination. METHODS Twenty-four patients with CHD infection were equally randomized (1:1:1) to receive myrcludex B, or PegIFNα-2a or their combination. Patients were evaluated for virological and biochemical response and tolerability of the study drugs at weeks 12 and 24. RESULTS Myrcludex B was well tolerated and no serious adverse event occurred. Although hepatitis B surface antigen levels remained unchanged, HDV RNA significantly declined at week 24 in all cohorts. HDV RNA became negative in two patients each in the Myrcludex B and PegIFNα-2a cohorts, and in five patients of the Myrcludex B+PegIFNα-2a cohort. ALT decreased significantly in the Myrcludex B cohort (six of eight patients), and HBV DNA was significantly reduced at week 24 in the Myrcludex B+PegIFNα-2a cohort. Virus kinetic modeling suggested a strong synergistic effect of myrcludex B and PegIFNα-2a on both HDV and HBV. CONCLUSIONS Myrcludex B showed a strong effect on HDV RNA serum levels and induced ALT normalization under monotherapy. Synergistic antiviral effects on HDV RNA and HBV DNA in the Myr-IFN cohort indicated a benefit of the combination of entry inhibition with PegIFNα-2a to treat CHD patients. LAY SUMMARY Myrcludex B is a new drug to treat hepatitis B and D infection. After 24weeks of treatment with myrcludex B and/or pegylated interferon α-2a, HDV R NA, a relevant marker for hepatitis D infection, decreased in all patients with chronic hepatitis B and D. Two of eight patients which received either myrcludex B or pegylated interferon α-2a, became negative for HDV RNA, and five of seven patients who received both drugs at the same time became negative. The drug was well tolerated.


The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 2012

Dabigatran Etexilate in Atrial Fibrillation Patients With Severe Renal Impairment: Dose Identification Using Pharmacokinetic Modeling and Simulation

Thorsten Lehr; Sebastian Haertter; Karl-Heinz Liesenfeld; Alexander Staab; Andreas Clemens; Paul A. Reilly; Jeffrey Friedman

Dabigatran, administered orally as the prodrug dabigatran etexilate (DE), is a direct thrombin inhibitor shown to be effective in the prevention of stroke and systemic embolism in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). The aim of this analysis was to derive a modeling and simulation‐based dose and dosing regimen for AF patients with severe renal failure who could potentially benefit from the use of DE. The exposure was simulated for AF patients with severe renal impairment for several combinations of doses (75, 110, 150 mg) and posologies (BID, QD, Q2D). Simulations were based on a population pharmacokinetic model derived from data from 9522 patients from the pivotal phase III study (RE‐LY). Atrial fibrillation patients with a creatinine clearance (CRCL) of <30 to ≥15 mL/min treated with a dose of 75 mg DE BID have target plasma level and exposure data largely within the concentration range proven to be safe and effective in AF patients with CRCL >30 mL/min receiving 150 mg BID. This dosing algorithm was also confirmed and supported by the United States Food and Drug Administration Clinical Pharmacology Division using their model based on the data from the dedicated renal impairment study and taking into account the safety and efficacy information from RE‐LY.


Journal of Hepatology | 2016

First-in-human application of the novel hepatitis B and hepatitis D virus entry inhibitor myrcludex B

Antje Blank; Christoph Markert; Nicolas Hohmann; Alexandra Carls; Gerd Mikus; Thorsten Lehr; A. Alexandrov; Mathias Haag; Matthias Schwab; Stephan Urban; Walter E. Haefeli

BACKGROUND & AIMS Myrcludex B is a first-in-class compound, which blocks entry of hepatitis B and D virus into hepatocytes in vitro and in animal models. Based on the required preclinical data we aimed to translate this compound into the first application in humans. METHODS Single ascending doses of myrcludex B, a 47 amino acid peptide, were administered up to 20mg intravenously and 10mg subcutaneously in a prospective open first-in-human, phase I clinical trial to 36 healthy volunteers. Safety, tolerability and plasma concentrations of myrcludex B were assessed and a pharmacokinetic model was derived. RESULTS Myrcludex B was well tolerated and no serious or relevant AEs representing off-target effects, and no immunogenic effects were observed up to the highest applied dose of 20mg (intravenously). Myrcludex B showed dose-dependent pharmacokinetics, best described by a 2-compartment target-mediated drug disposition model. Bioavailability of the subcutaneous application was large (85%). Interindividual variability was moderate. The pharmacokinetic model suggested that subcutaneous doses of 10mg and above reach a target saturation of over 80% for at least 15h. CONCLUSIONS Myrcludex B showed excellent tolerability up to high doses. Pharmacologic properties followed a 2-compartment target-mediated drug disposition model. These findings are vital for planning of further multiple dose efficacy trials in patients. LAY SUMMARY After showing antiviral activity in cell culture and animal models, myrcludex B, a new drug intended for the treatment of hepatitis B and D, has been administered the first time in humans. Healthy volunteers received the drug intravenously and subcutaneously up to high doses (20mg). The drug was well tolerated and the characteristics of the drug determining its way in the human body could be described. These results will allow testing myrcludex B in hepatitis B and D patients.


Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2012

A combined pharmacometric analysis of dabigatran etexilate in healthy volunteers and patients with atrial fibrillation or undergoing orthopaedic surgery

C. Dansirikul; Thorsten Lehr; Karl-Heinz Liesenfeld; Sebastian Haertter; Alexander Staab

Dabigatran etexilate is the orally bioavailable pro-drug of dabigatran, a direct thrombin inhibitor. Using data from eight clinical studies in healthy volunteers and patients with non-valvular atrial fibrillation (AF) or undergoing orthopaedic surgery (OS), population pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacodynamic (PD) models were developed to investigate whether the PK and PD of dabigatran differ across different populations. In both healthy volunteers (n=80) and patients (n=1,965), the PK of dabigatran was best described by a two-compartment disposition model with first-order absorption and elimination. Renal function was the only covariate shown to have a clinically relevant impact on dabigatran exposure. The patient PK model was successfully applied in predicting exposure observed in the RE-LY trial evaluating dabigatran treatment in patients with non-valvular AF. The relationship between dabigatran plasma concentrations and activated partial thromboplastin time in healthy volunteers and patients (n=762) was best described with a combination of a linear model and a maximum effect (Emax) model, consistent with previous reports. PK/PD relationships were robust across the various populations tested and were not affected by any of the covariates examined. In summary, the PK of dabigatran is sufficiently consistent to allow extrapolation of data generated in healthy volunteers to patients with AF or undergoing OS.


Current Medical Research and Opinion | 2012

Twice daily dosing of dabigatran for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation: a pharmacokinetic justification.

Andreas Clemens; Sebastian Haertter; Jeffrey Friedman; Martina Brueckmann; Joachim Stangier; Joanne van Ryn; Thorsten Lehr

Abstract Background and objective: Dabigatran is a new oral anticoagulant recently approved for the prevention of stroke or systemic embolism in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). Based on its pharmacokinetic profile, dabigatran is dosed twice daily. This analysis provides a quantitative rationale for the selection of the dose regimen in this population. Methods: The pharmacokinetic profile of dabigatran was simulated for AF patients given a total daily dose of 300 mg, either once or twice daily. Simulations were based on a population pharmacokinetic model supplemented with data collected from 9522 patients enrolled in a pivotal phase III study (RE-LY). Results: The typical RE-LY patient (male, 72 years old, Caucasian, weight 80 kg, creatinine clearance 68.64 mL/min) treated with dabigatran 150 mg twice daily showed less than two-fold difference between peak–trough plasma levels compared with a five-fold difference when the same total dose (300 mg) was administered once daily. For patients who miss or delay taking one scheduled dabigatran dose, twice daily dosing maintained adequate minimum trough concentrations better than once daily dosing. Pharmacokinetic data collected from a phase II study and RE-LY were consistent with the simulation results. The study did not access comparative efficacy and bleeding data for once versus twice daily dosing. Conclusion: Pharmacokinetic simulations show that a twice daily regimen in patients with AF minimizes daily fluctuations in plasma concentrations of dabigatran and can maintain trough concentrations sufficient to prevent the development of thrombi while at the same time minimizing the risk of bleeding due to supratherapeutic peak plasma concentrations. The efficacy and safety of this dosing regimen is supported by clinical data from the RE-LY trial.

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Charlotte Kloft

Free University of Berlin

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