Participants
All studies enrolled healthy volunteers. Eligible individuals were aged 18–55 years, weighed 50–90 kg, had a body mass index of 18–29.9 kg/m2 (upper limit of 30 kg/m2 for the ketoconazole study), and had normal blood pressure. Volunteers were excluded from participation if they tested positive for HIV, hepatitis B, or hepatitis C or if they had an abnormal electrocardiogram, a history of myocardial infarction, or a family medical history of long QT interval syndrome. Women currently pregnant or breast-feeding were excluded, as were individuals who had used any prescription medication within 14 days or over-the-counter medication in the past 7 days. Additionally, participants had to be willing to abstain from sexual intercourse or use an approved form of contraception while on study. Additional inclusion/exclusion criteria are included in Supplementary Table 1.
Study designs and objectives
Midostaurin PK when administered with ketoconazole
In this single-center, open-label, randomized, parallel-group phase I study, healthy volunteers were randomized to receive either ketoconazole 400 mg or placebo daily from day 1 to day 10; in addition, all participants received midostaurin 50 mg once on day 6 (Table 1). According to the US Food and Drug Administration, ketoconazole 400 mg once daily is the recommended dose to evaluate DDIs involving CYP3A4 inhibition [20].
The primary objective of this study was to investigate the effect of ketoconazole on the PK of a single oral dose of midostaurin in healthy volunteers. The secondary objective was to assess the safety and tolerability of a single dose of midostaurin given alone or in combination with ketoconazole in healthy volunteers. All randomized participants were included in the population evaluated for safety, whereas the PK population only included individuals who received all planned doses of the study drug, had evaluable PK profiles, and did not vomit within 4 h after midostaurin administration. Adverse events (AEs) were recorded during the study and up to 1 month (28 days) after the end of study. Volunteers remained at the clinic until AEs were common toxicity criteria (CTC) grade ≤1. Blood samples (4 mL/sample) for the determination of midostaurin PK and ketoconazole levels were collected predose and at various times after midostaurin dosing on day 6 (Table 1).
Midostaurin PK when administered with rifampicin
In this open-label, randomized, parallel-group phase I study, healthy volunteers were randomized to receive either rifampicin 600 mg or placebo daily from day 1 to day 14; all participants received midostaurin 50 mg once on day 9 (Table 1). The primary objective of this study was to investigate the effect of co-administration of rifampicin on the PK of a single oral dose of midostaurin in healthy volunteers. The secondary objective was to investigate the safety and tolerability of midostaurin alone and in combination with rifampicin. The PK and safety populations and safety assessments used the same definitions as those in the ketoconazole study.
Blood samples were collected at various times to assess midostaurin PK and rifampicin levels (Table 1). In addition, on days 1 (baseline), 9 (before midostaurin treatment), 11, and 15, levels of 4β-hydroxycholesterol in plasma and the 6β-hydroxycortisol/cortisol ratio in urine were assessed. These endogenous molecules served as exploratory biomarkers for CYP3A4 activity in vivo [21, 22].
Midazolam PK when administered with midostaurin
In this open-label, single-arm phase I study, healthy volunteers were administered the following treatment regimen: on day 1, participants received a solution of midazolam 4 mg with a standard breakfast; day 2 was a rest day during which no treatment was administered; on day 3, participants received midostaurin 100 mg plus a solution of midazolam 4 mg with a standard breakfast (Table 1). On days 4–6, participants received midostaurin 50 mg twice daily with a standard breakfast; day 7 was a rest day with no treatment administered; on day 8, participants received a solution of midazolam 4 mg with a standard breakfast. The drug holiday on day 7 was added to minimize the inhibitory effect of midostaurin on CYP3A4 prior to midazolam dosing on day 8. Such a holiday is feasible without affecting enzyme induction because of the long half-lives of midostaurin and its metabolites [23] and the long degradation half-life of CYP3A4 (approximately 3 days) [24].
The primary objective of this study was to investigate the potential effect of midostaurin as “perpetrator” on the PK of midazolam as an inhibitor on day 3 and a potential inducer on day 8. Both inhibition and induction of midazolam clearance were investigated. The secondary objective was to investigate the safety and tolerability of concomitant administration of midazolam and midostaurin. All volunteers were included in the population evaluated for safety, whereas the PK population only included individuals who took all scheduled doses of midostaurin and midazolam without vomiting within 4 h after dosing.
Blood samples were collected at various time points to assess midazolam PK as well as levels of midostaurin and its metabolites (Table 1). Similarly, blood and urine samples were taken on days 1, 3, 6, 7, 8, and 9 to measure the levels of 4β-hydroxycholesterol in plasma and the 6β-hydroxycortisol/cortisol ratio in urine, markers of CYP3A4 activity.
PK and statistical data analyses
DDI with ketoconazole
The PK parameters of midostaurin and its metabolites [C
max, time to reach maximal concentration (t
max), AUC0–last, AUCinf, and t
1/2] were derived using noncompartmental methods with the aid of WinNonLin 5.2 software (Pharsight Corp, St Louis, MO, USA). Because of the long apparent elimination t
1/2 of CGP52421, it was not possible with the given sampling schedule to reliably estimate AUC0–inf and t
1/2 values for this analyte. Following log transformation, AUC0–last and C
max were analyzed separately using an analysis of variance (ANOVA) model including a term for treatment (“ketoconazole + midostaurin” as test and “placebo + midostaurin” as reference). A point estimate and the corresponding 90 % CI for the treatment effect were calculated for the test treatment compared with the reference. These were anti-logged to obtain the point estimate and the 90 % CI for the geometric mean ratio (GMR) on the untransformed scale. AUC0–inf was also analyzed for midostaurin and its active metabolite CGP62221 using the same method. All ANOVAs were performed using SAS software (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA).
DDI with rifampicin
The PK parameters of midostaurin and its metabolites (C
max, t
max, AUC0–last, AUCinf, t
1/2, and Cl/F) were derived using noncompartmental methods with the aid of WinNonLin 5.2. As in the ketoconazole study, the sampling schedule was not consistent with obtaining good estimates of the apparent terminal t
1/2 and consequently AUCinf for CGP52421. Following log transformation, the primary variables were analyzed separately using an ANOVA model including a term for treatment (“rifampicin + midostaurin” as test and “midostaurin + placebo” as reference). A point estimate and the corresponding 90 % CI for the treatment effect (test vs reference) were calculated. These were anti-logged to obtain the GMR and respective 90 % CI. The t
max for midostaurin (and its metabolites) was compared between the test and reference treatments by comparing the median, minimum, and maximum values in the two treatment conditions. The median difference was estimated with the Hodges–Lehmann estimator and its respective exact two-sided 90 % CI. All formal comparative statistical analyses were performed using SAS software.
DDI with midazolam
The PK parameters of midazolam and its metabolites (C
max, t
max, AUC0–last, AUCinf, and t
1/2) were derived using a noncompartmental method with the aid of WinNonLin 5.2. In this study, the reference treatment was midazolam administered alone on day 1, and this was compared with two test treatments defined as (1) midazolam with midostaurin on day 3 (to test for inhibition of CYP3A4 by midostaurin) and (2) midazolam alone on day 8 (to test for induction of CYP3A4 by midostaurin). Following log transformation, the primary PK parameters were analyzed using a linear, mixed-effects model using the term of treatment as a fixed factor (reference, test 1, test 2) and subject as a random factor. A point estimate and the corresponding 90 % CI for the difference in test 1 versus reference and the difference in test 2 versus reference were derived from the respective contrasts of the model estimates and anti-logged to obtain the GMR and respective 90 % CI.
Bioanalytical methods
The concentrations of unchanged midostaurin, CGP52421, and CGP62221 in the plasma were determined using a validated liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS) assay with a lower limit of quantitation (LLOQ) of 10 ng/mL (Novartis SAS France bioanalytics and SGS, Cephac Europe, SAS). The concentration of ketoconazole in plasma was assessed using a validated LC–MS/MS assay with an LLOQ of 50.0 ng/mL (WuXi Pharmatech Co, Ltd, China). The concentration of rifampicin in plasma was measured using a validated LC–MS/MS assay with an LLOQ of 5.0 ng/mL (SGS, Cephac Europe, SAS). Plasma concentrations of midazolam and its metabolite 1′-hydroxymidazolam, which is generated by CYP3A4 and CYP3A5 in humans, were measured using a validated LC–MS/MS assay with an LLOQ of ≈0.100 ng/mL (SGS, Cephac Europe, SAS). The plasma concentration of 4β-hydroxycholesterol was measured using a validated LC–MS/MS assay with an LLOQ of 3.0 ng/mL (SGS, Cephac Europe, SAS). The concentrations of 6β-hydroxycortisol and cortisol in urine were determined using validated LC–MS/MS assays with an LLOQ of 10.0 ng/mL for 6β-hydroxycortisol and 1.0 ng/mL for cortisol. The ratio of 6β-hydroxycortisol to cortisol was subsequently calculated (SGS, Cephac Europe, SAS). See Supplementary Table 2 for detailed bioanalytical methods for all 3 studies.
Ethics
All studies were conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki, and all volunteers provided written informed consent according to institutional guidelines. All studies were conducted at the Early Phase Clinical Unit of PAREXEL International GmbH in Berlin, Germany. All study protocols were reviewed and approved by the State Office of Health and Social Affairs Ethics Committee of Berlin (Landesamt für Gesundheitund Soziales Ethik-Kommission des Landes Berlin) for PAREXEL International GmbH (DDI with ketoconazole, EudraCT 2008-003038-39; DDI with rifampicin, EudraCT 2009-009895-11; DDI with midazolam, EudraCT 2009-009870-29).