General Pharmacokinetic Characteristics:
Dose-proportional increases in plasma exposure (AUC) to posaconazole oral suspension were observed following single oral doses from 50 mg to 800 mg and following multiple-dose administration from 50 mg twice daily to 400 mg twice daily in healthy volunteers. No further increases in exposure were observed when the dose of the oral suspension increased from 400 mg twice daily to 600 mg twice daily in febrile neutropenic patients or those with refractory invasive fungal infections.
The mean (%CV) [min-max] posaconazole oral suspension average steady-state plasma concentrations (Cavg) and steady-state pharmacokinetic parameters in patients following administration of 200 mg three times a day and 400 mg twice daily of the oral suspension are provided in Table 21.
Table 21: The Mean (%CV) [min-max] Posaconazole Steady-State Pharmacokinetic Parameters in Patients Following Oral Administration of Posaconazole Oral Suspension 200 mg Three Times a Day and 400 mg Twice Daily
| Dose Oral suspension administration | Cavg (ng/mL) | AUC AUC (0 to 24 hr) for 200 mg three times a day and AUC (0 to 12 hr) for 400 mg twice daily (ng∙hr/mL) | CL/F (L/hr) | V/F (L) | t½ (hr) |
|---|
200 mg three times a day HSCT recipients with GVHD (n=252) | 1,103 (67) [21.5 to 3650] | ND Not done | ND | ND | ND |
200 mg three times a day Neutropenic patients who were receiving cytotoxic chemotherapy for acute myelogenous leukemia or myelodysplastic syndromes (n=215) | 583 (65) [89.7 to 2,200] | 15,900 (62) [4100 to 56,100] | 51.2 (54) [10.7 to 146] | 2425 (39) [828 to 5,702] | 37.2 (39) [19.1 to 148] |
400 mg twice daily Febrile neutropenic patients or patients with refractory invasive fungal infections, Cavg n=24 The variability in average plasma posaconazole concentrations in patients was relatively higher than that in healthy subjects. (n=23) | 723 (86) [6.70 to 2,256] | 9093 (80) [1,564 to 26,794] | 76.1 (78) [14.9 to 256] | 3088 (84) [407 to 13,140] | 31.7 (42) [12.4 to 67.3] |
Cavg = the average posaconazole concentration when measured at steady state |
Absorption:
Posaconazole oral suspension is absorbed with a median Tmax of ~3 to 5 hours. Steady-state plasma concentrations are attained at 7 to 10 days following multiple-dose administration.
Following single-dose administration of 200 mg, the mean AUC and Cmax of posaconazole are approximately 3-times higher when the oral suspension is administered with a nonfat meal and approximately 4-times higher when administered with a high-fat meal (~50 gm fat) relative to the fasted state. Following single-dose administration of posaconazole oral suspension 400 mg, the mean AUC and Cmax of posaconazole are approximately 3-times higher when administered with a liquid nutritional supplement (14 gm fat) relative to the fasted state (see Table 24). In addition, the effects of varying gastric administration conditions on the Cmax and AUC of posaconazole oral suspension in healthy volunteers have been investigated and are shown in Table 25.
In order to assure attainment of adequate plasma concentrations, it is recommended to administer posaconazole oral suspension during or immediately following a full meal. In patients who cannot eat a full meal, posaconazole oral suspension should be taken with a liquid nutritional supplement or an acidic carbonated beverage (e.g., ginger ale).
Table 24: The Mean (%CV) [min-max] Posaconazole Pharmacokinetic Parameters Following Single-Dose Oral Suspension Administration of 200 mg and 400 mg Under Fed and Fasted Conditions
| Dose (mg) | Cmax (ng/mL) | Tmax Median [min-max]. (hr) | AUC (I) (ng∙hr/mL) | CL/F (L/hr) | t½ (hr) |
|---|
200 mg fasted (n=20) n=15 for AUC (I), CL/F, and t½ | 132 (50) [45 to 267] | 3.50 [1.5 to 36 The subject with Tmax of 36 hrs had relatively constant plasma levels over 36 hrs (1.7 ng/mL difference between 4 hrs and 36 hrs). ] | 4179 (31) [2,705 to 7,269] | 51 (25) [28 to 74] | 23.5 (25) [15.3 to 33.7] |
200 mg nonfat (n=20) | 378 (43) [131 to 834] | 4 [3 to 5] | 10,753 (35) [4,579 to 17,092] | 21 (39) [12 to 44] | 22.2 (18) [17.4 to 28.7] |
200 mg high fat (54 gm fat) (n=20) | 512 (34) [241 to 1,016] | 5 [4 to 5] | 15,059 (26) [10,341 to 24,476] | 14 (24) [8.2 to 19] | 23.0 (19) [17.2 to 33.4] |
400 mg fasted (n=23) n=10 for AUC (I), CL/F, and t½ | 121 (75) [27 to 366] | 4 [2 to 12] | 5258 (48) [2,834 to 9,567] | 91 (40) [42 to 141] | 27.3 (26) [16.8 to 38.9] |
400 mg with liquid nutritional supplement (14 gm fat) (n=23) | 355 (43) [145 to 720] | 5 [4 to 8] | 11,295 (40) [3,865 to 20,592] | 43 (56) [19 to 103] | 26.0 (19) [18.2 to 35.0] |
Table 25: The Effect of Varying Gastric Administration Conditions on the Cmax and AUC of Posaconazole Oral Suspension in Healthy VolunteersIn 5 subjects, the Cmax and AUC decreased substantially (range: -27% to -53% and -33% to -51%, respectively) when posaconazole was administered via an NG tube compared to when posaconazole was administered orally. It is recommended to closely monitor patients for breakthrough fungal infections when posaconazole is administered via an NG tube because a lower plasma exposure may be associated with an increased risk of treatment failure.
| Study Description | Administration Arms | Change in Cmax (ratio estimateRatio Estimate is the ratio of coadministered drug plus posaconazole to coadministered drug alone for Cmax or AUC. ; 90% CI of the ratio estimate) | Change in AUC (ratio estimate; 90% CI of the ratio estimate) |
|---|
400 mg single dose with a high-fat meal relative to fasted state (n=12)
| 5 minutes before high-fat meal | ↑96% (1.96; 1.48 to 2.59) | ↑111% (2.11; 1.60 to 2.78) |
During high-fat meal | ↑339% (4.39; 3.32 to 5.80) | ↑382% (4.82; 3.66 to 6.35) |
20 minutes after high-fat meal | ↑333% (4.33; 3.28 to 5.73) | ↑387% (4.87; 3.70 to 6.42) |
400 mg twice daily and 200 mg four times daily for 7 days in fasted state and with liquid nutritional supplement (BOOST®) (n=12) | 400 mg twice daily with BOOST | ↑65% (1.65; 1.29 to 2.11) | ↑66% (1.66; 1.30 to 2.13) |
200 mg four times daily with BOOST | No Effect | No Effect |
Divided daily dose from 400 mg twice daily to 200 mg four times daily for 7 days regardless of fasted conditions or with BOOST (n=12) | Fasted state | ↑136% (2.36; 1.84 to 3.02) | ↑161% (2.61; 2.04 to 3.35) |
With BOOST | ↑137% (2.37; 1.86 to 3.04) | ↑157% (2.57; 2.00 to 3.30) |
400-mg single dose with carbonated acidic beverage (ginger ale) and/or proton pump inhibitor (esomeprazole) (n=12) | Ginger ale | ↑92% (1.92; 1.51 to 2.44) | ↑70% (1.70; 1.43 to 2.03) |
Esomeprazole | ↓32% (0.68; 0.53 to 0.86) | ↓30% (0.70; 0.59 to 0.83) |
400-mg single dose with a prokinetic agent (metoclopramide 10 mg three times a day for 2 days) + BOOST or an antikinetic agent (loperamide 4-mg single dose) + BOOST (n=12) | With metoclopramide + BOOST | ↓21% (0.79; 0.72 to 0.87) | ↓19% (0.81; 0.72 to 0.91) |
With loperamide + BOOST | ↓3% (0.97; 0.88 to 1.07) | ↑11% (1.11; 0.99 to 1.25) |
400-mg single dose either orally with BOOST or via an NG tube with BOOST (n=16) | Via NG tube NG = nasogastric | ↓19% (0.81; 0.71 to 0.91) | ↓23% (0.77; 0.69 to 0.86) |
Concomitant administration of posaconazole oral suspension with drugs affecting gastric pH or gastric motility results in lower posaconazole exposure. (See Table 26).
Table 26: The Effect of Concomitant Medications that Affect the Gastric pH and Gastric Motility on the Pharmacokinetics of Posaconazole Oral Suspension in Healthy Volunteers
| Coadministered Drug (Postulated Mechanism of Interaction) | Coadministered Drug Dose/Schedule | Posaconazole Dose/Schedule | Effect on Bioavailability of Posaconazole |
|---|
Change in Mean Cmax (ratio estimateRatio Estimate is the ratio of coadministered drug plus posaconazole to coadministered drug alone for Cmax or AUC. ; 90% CI of the ratio estimate) | Change in Mean AUC (ratio estimate; 90% CI of the ratio estimate) |
|---|
Cimetidine (Alteration of gastric pH) | 400 mg twice daily × 10 days | 200 mg (tablets) once daily × 10 days The tablet refers to a non-commercial tablet formulation without polymer. | ↓ 39% (0.61; 0.53 to 0.70) | ↓ 39% (0.61; 0.54 to 0.69) |
Esomeprazole (Increase in gastric pH) The drug interactions associated with the oral suspension are also relevant for the delayed-release tablet with the exception of Esomeprazole and Metoclopramide. | 40 mg every morning × 3 days | 400 mg (oral suspension) single dose | ↓ 46% (0.54; 0.43 to 0.69) | ↓ 32% (0.68; 0.57 to 0.81) |
Metoclopramide (Increase in gastric motility) | 10 mg three times a day × 2 days | 400 mg (oral suspension) single dose | ↓ 21% (0.79; 0.72 to 0.87) | ↓ 19% (0.81; 0.72 to 0.91) |
Distribution: The mean volume of distribution of posaconazole after intravenous solution administration was 261 L and ranged from 226 to 295 L between studies and dose levels.
Posaconazole is highly bound to human plasma proteins (>98%), predominantly to albumin.
Metabolism: Posaconazole primarily circulates as the parent compound in plasma. Of the circulating metabolites, the majority are glucuronide conjugates formed via UDP glucuronidation (phase 2 enzymes). Posaconazole does not have any major circulating oxidative (CYP450 mediated) metabolites. The excreted metabolites in urine and feces account for ~17% of the administered radiolabeled dose.
Posaconazole is primarily metabolized via UDP glucuronidation (phase 2 enzymes) and is a substrate for p-glycoprotein (P-gp) efflux. Therefore, inhibitors or inducers of these clearance pathways may affect posaconazole plasma concentrations. A summary of drugs studied clinically with the oral suspension or an early tablet formulation, which affect posaconazole concentrations, is provided in Table 27.
Table 27: Summary of the Effect of Coadministered Drugs on Posaconazole in Healthy Volunteers
| Coadministered Drug (Postulated Mechanism of Interaction) | Coadministered Drug Dose/Schedule | Posaconazole Dose/Schedule | Effect on Bioavailability of Posaconazole |
|---|
Change in Mean Cmax (ratio estimateRatio Estimate is the ratio of coadministered drug plus posaconazole to posaconazole alone for Cmax or AUC. ; 90% CI of the ratio estimate) | Change in Mean AUC (ratio estimate; 90% CI of the ratio estimate) |
|---|
Efavirenz (UDP-G Induction) | 400 mg once daily × 10 and 20 days | 400 mg (oral suspension) twice daily × 10 and 20 days | ↓45% (0.55; 0.47 to 0.66) | ↓ 50% (0.50; 0.43 to 0.60) |
Fosamprenavir (unknown mechanism) | 700 mg twice daily × 10 days | 200 mg once daily on the 1st day, 200 mg twice daily on the 2nd day, then 400 mg twice daily × 8 Days | ↓21% 0.79 (0.71 to 0.89) | ↓23% 0.77 (0.68 to 0.87) |
Rifabutin (UDP-G Induction) | 300 mg once daily × 17 days | 200 mg (tablets) once daily × 10 days The tablet refers to a non-commercial tablet formulation without polymer. | ↓ 43% (0.57; 0.43 to 0.75) | ↓ 49% (0.51; 0.37 to 0.71) |
Phenytoin (UDP-G Induction) | 200 mg once daily × 10 days | 200 mg (tablets) once daily × 10 days | ↓ 41% (0.59; 0.44 to 0.79) | ↓ 50% (0.50; 0.36 to 0.71) |
In vitro studies with human hepatic microsomes and clinical studies indicate that posaconazole is an inhibitor primarily of CYP3A4. A clinical study in healthy volunteers also indicates that posaconazole is a strong CYP3A4 inhibitor as evidenced by a >5-fold increase in midazolam AUC. Therefore, plasma concentrations of drugs predominantly metabolized by CYP3A4 may be increased by posaconazole. A summary of the drugs studied clinically, for which plasma concentrations were affected by posaconazole, is provided in Table 28[see Contraindications (4) and Drug Interactions (7.1) including recommendations].
Table 28: Summary of the Effect of Posaconazole on Coadministered Drugs in Healthy Adult Volunteers and Patients
Coadministered Drug (Postulated Mechanism of Interaction is Inhibition of CYP3A4 by posaconazole) | Coadministered Drug Dose/Schedule | Posaconazole Dose/Schedule | Effect on Bioavailability of Coadministered Drugs |
|---|
Change in Mean Cmax (ratio estimateThe Ratio Estimate is the ratio of coadministered drug plus posaconazole to coadministered drug alone for Cmax or AUC. ; 90% CI of the ratio estimate) | Change in Mean AUC (ratio estimate; 90% CI of the ratio estimate) |
|---|
Sirolimus | 2 mg single oral dose | 400 mg (oral suspension) twice daily × 16 days | ↑ 572% (6.72; 5.62 to 8.03) | ↑ 788% (8.88; 7.26 to 10.9) |
Cyclosporine | Stable maintenance dose in heart transplant recipients | 200 mg (tablets) once daily × 10 days The tablet refers to a non-commercial tablet formulation without polymer. | ↑ cyclosporine whole blood trough concentrations Cyclosporine dose reductions of up to 29% were required |
Tacrolimus | 0.05 mg/kg single oral dose | 400 mg (oral suspension) twice daily × 7 days | ↑ 121% (2.21; 2.01 to 2.42) | ↑ 358% (4.58; 4.03 to 5.19) |
Simvastatin | 40 mg single oral dose | 100 mg (oral suspension) once daily × 13 days | Simvastatin ↑ 841% (9.41, 7.13 to 12.44) Simvastatin Acid ↑ 817% (9.17, 7.36 to 11.43) | Simvastatin ↑ 931% (10.31, 8.40 to 12.67) Simvastatin Acid ↑634% (7.34, 5.82 to 9.25) |
| | 200 mg (oral suspension) once daily × 13 days | Simvastatin ↑ 1041% (11.41, 7.99 to 16.29) Simvastatin Acid ↑851% (9.51, 8.15 to 11.10) | Simvastatin ↑ 960% (10.60, 8.63 to 13.02) Simvastatin Acid ↑748% (8.48, 7.04 to 10.23) |
Midazolam | 0.4 mg single intravenous dose The mean terminal half-life of midazolam was increased from 3 hours to 7 to 11 hours during coadministration with posaconazole. | 200 mg (oral suspension) twice daily × 7 days | ↑ 30% (1.3; 1.13 to 1.48) | ↑ 362% (4.62; 4.02 to 5.3) |
| 0.4 mg single intravenous dose | 400 mg (oral suspension) twice daily × 7 days | ↑62% (1.62; 1.41 to 1.86) | ↑524% (6.24; 5.43 to 7.16) |
| 2 mg single oral dose | 200 mg (oral suspension) once daily × 7 days | ↑ 169% (2.69; 2.46 to 2.93) | ↑ 470% (5.70; 4.82 to 6.74) |
| 2 mg single oral dose | 400 mg (oral suspension) twice daily × 7 days | ↑ 138% (2.38; 2.13 to 2.66) | ↑ 397% (4.97; 4.46 to 5.54) |
Rifabutin | 300 mg once daily × 17 days | 200 mg (tablets) once daily × 10 days | ↑ 31% (1.31; 1.10 to 1.57) | ↑ 72% (1.72;1.51 to 1.95) |
Phenytoin | 200 mg once daily PO × 10 days | 200 mg (tablets) once daily × 10 days | ↑ 16% (1.16; 0.85 to 1.57) | ↑ 16% (1.16; 0.84 to 1.59) |
Ritonavir | 100 mg once daily × 14 days | 400 mg (oral suspension) twice daily × 7 days | ↑ 49% (1.49; 1.04 to 2.15) | ↑ 80% (1.8;1.39 to 2.31) |
Atazanavir | 300 mg once daily × 14 days | 400 mg (oral suspension) twice daily × 7 days | ↑ 155% (2.55; 1.89 to 3.45) | ↑ 268% (3.68; 2.89 to 4.70) |
Atazanavir/ ritonavir boosted regimen | 300 mg/100 mg once daily × 14 days | 400 mg (oral suspension) twice daily × 7 days | ↑ 53% (1.53; 1.13 to 2.07) | ↑ 146% (2.46; 1.93 to 3.13) |
Additional clinical studies demonstrated that no clinically significant effects on zidovudine, lamivudine, indinavir, or caffeine were observed when administered with posaconazole 200 mg once daily; therefore, no dose adjustments are required for these coadministered drugs when coadministered with posaconazole 200 mg once daily.
Excretion: Following administration of posaconazole oral suspension, posaconazole is predominantly eliminated in the feces (71% of the radiolabeled dose up to 120 hours) with the major component eliminated as parent drug (66% of the radiolabeled dose). Renal clearance is a minor elimination pathway, with 13% of the radiolabeled dose excreted in urine up to 120 hours (<0.2% of the radiolabeled dose is parent drug).
Posaconazole oral suspension is eliminated with a mean half-life (t½) of 35 hours (range: 20 to 66 hours).
Specific Populations:
No clinically significant differences in the pharmacokinetics of posaconazole were observed based on age, sex, renal impairment, and indication (prophylaxis or treatment).
Race/Ethnicity: In a population pharmacokinetic analysis of posaconazole, AUC was found to be 25% higher in Chinese patients relative to patients from other races/ethnicities. This higher exposure is not expected to be clinically relevant given the expected variability in posaconazole exposure.
Patients Weighing More Than 120 kg: Weight has a clinically significant effect on posaconazole clearance. Relative to 70 kg patients, the Cavg is decreased by 25% in patients greater than 120 kg. Patients administered posaconazole weighing more than 120 kg may be at higher risk for lower posaconazole plasma concentrations compared to lower weight patients [see Use in Specific Populations (8.10)].
Pediatric Patients:
The population pharmacokinetic analysis of posaconazole in pediatric patients suggests that age, sex, renal impairment and ethnicity have no clinically meaningful effect on the pharmacokinetics of posaconazole.
A total of 12 patients 13 to 17 years of age received 600 mg/day (200 mg three times a day) of posaconazole oral suspension for prophylaxis of invasive fungal infections. Based on pharmacokinetic data in 10 of these pediatric patients, the mean steady-state Cav was similar between these patients and adults (≥18 years of age). In a study of 136 neutropenic pediatric patients 11 months to less than 18 years treated with posaconazole oral suspension, the exposure target of steady-state posaconazole Cavg between 500 ng/mL and less than 2500 ng/mL was attained in approximately 50% of patients instead of the pre-specified 90% of patients.