Clinical Pharmacology for Velphoro
Mechanism Of Action
In the aqueous environment of the GI tract, phosphate binding takes place by ligand exchange between hydroxyl groups and/or water in sucroferric oxyhydroxide and the phosphate in the diet. The bound phosphate is eliminated with feces.
Both serum phosphorus levels and calcium-phosphorus product levels are reduced as a consequence of the reduced dietary phosphate absorption.
Pharmacodynamics
In vitro studies have demonstrated a robust phosphate binding capacity of Velphoro over the physiologically relevant pH range of the GI tract (1.2-7.5). The phosphate binding capacity of Velphoro peaked at pH 2.5, resulting in 96% of the available phosphate being adsorbed (phosphorus:iron concentration ratio 0.4:1).
Pharmacokinetics
The active moiety of Velphoro, polynuclear iron (III)-oxyhydroxide (pn-FeOOH), is practically insoluble in water and therefore not absorbed and not metabolized. Its degradation product, mononuclear iron species, can however be released from the surface of pn-FeOOH and be absorbed.
Because of the insolubility and degradation characteristics of Velphoro, no classical pharmacokinetic studies can be carried out.
The sucrose and starch components of Velphoro can be digested to glucose and fructose, and maltose and glucose, respectively. These compounds can be absorbed in the blood.
The iron uptake from radiolabeled Velphoro drug substance, 2,000 mg in 1 day, was investigated in 16 chronic kidney disease patients (8 pre-dialysis and 8 hemodialysis patients) and 8 healthy volunteers with low iron stores (serum ferritin <100 mcg/L). In healthy subjects, the median uptake of radiolabeled iron in the blood was 0.43% on Day 21. In chronic kidney disease patients, the median uptake was much less, 0.04% on Day 21.
Drug Interaction Studies
In Vitro
In vitro interactions were studied in aqueous solutions which mimic the physico-chemical conditions of the gastro-intestinal tract with or without the presence of phosphate (400 mg). The study was conducted at pH 3.0, 5.5 and 8.0 with incubation at 37°C for 6 hours.
Interaction with Velphoro was seen with the following drugs: alendronate, doxycycline, acetylsalicylic acid, cephalexin, levothyroxine, and paricalcitol.
The following drugs did not show interaction with Velphoro: ciprofloxacin, enalapril, hydrochlorothiazide, metoprolol, nifedipine, and quinidine.
In Vivo
Five in vivo drug interaction studies (N=40/study) were conducted with losartan, furosemide, digoxin, omeprazole and warfarin in healthy subjects receiving 1,000 mg Velphoro 3 times a day with meals. Velphoro did not alter the systemic exposure as measured by the area under the curve (AUC) of the tested drugs when co-administered with Velphoro or given 2 hours later.
Data from the clinical studies (Study-05A and Study-05B) show that Velphoro does not affect the lipid lowering effects of HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors or the PTH lowering effect of calcitriol.
Clinical Studies
Fixed-Dose Study
In Study-03A, 154 ESRD adult patients on hemodialysis who were hyperphosphatemic (serum phosphorus >5.5 mg/dL but <7.75 mg/dL) following a 2-week phosphate binder washout period, were randomized to receive Velphoro at 250 mg/day, 1,000 mg/day, 1,500 mg/day, 2,000 mg/day, or 2,500 mg/day or active-control (sevelamer hydrochloride). Velphoro treatment was divided across meals, depending on dose. No dose titration was allowed. Within each of the groups, the serum phosphorus level at the end of treatment was compared to baseline value. Velphoro was shown to be efficacious (p≤0.016) for all doses except 250 mg/day. There were no patient-reported dose limiting treatment-emergent adverse events.
Mean changes in iron parameters (ferritin, transferrin saturation (TSAT) and transferrin) and vitamins (A, D, E and K) were generally not clinically meaningful and showed no apparent trends across the treatment groups. Velphoro had a similar GI adverse event profile [see ADVERSE REACTIONS] to sevelamer hydrochloride, and no dose-dependent trend in GI events was observed.
Dose Titration Study
In Study-05A, 1,055 adult patients on hemodialysis (N=968) or peritoneal dialysis (N=87) with serum phosphorus ≥6 mg/dL following a 2-4 week phosphate binder washout period, were randomized and treated with either Velphoro, at a starting dose of 1,000 mg/day (N=707), or active-control (sevelamer carbonate, N=348) for 24 weeks. At the end of Week 24, 93 patients on hemodialysis whose serum phosphorus levels were controlled (<5.5 mg/dL) with Velphoro in the first part of the study, were re-randomized to continue treatment with either their Week 24 maintenance dose (N=44 or a non-effective low dose control 250 mg/day, N=49) of Velphoro for a further 3 weeks. At Week 27, a superiority analysis of the Velphoro maintenance dose versus low dose was performed. The maximum dose of Velphoro was 3,000 mg/day (6 tablets/day) and the minimum dose was 1,000 mg/day (2 tablets/day). Velphoro was administered with food and the daily dose was divided across the largest meals of the day.
The Velphoro maintenance dose (1,000 to 3,000 mg/day) was statistically significantly superior in sustaining the phosphorus lowering effect in hemodialysis patients at Week 27 (p<0.001) compared with the non-effective low dose control. The results are provided in Table 2.
Table 2 Mean (SD) Serum Phosphorus and Change from Baseline to End of Treatment
|
Mean (SD) Serum Phosphorus (mg/dL) |
Velphoro Maintenance Dose
(1,000 to 3,000 mg/day)
(N=44) |
Velphoro Low Dose Control
(250 mg/day)
(N=49) |
| Week 24 (BL) |
4.7 (1.03) |
5.0 (1.14) |
| Week 25 |
4.7 (0.91) |
6.3 (1.44) |
| Week 26 |
4.7 (1.21) |
6.6 (1.91) |
| Week 27/End of Treatment |
5.0 (1.07) |
6.8 (1.63) |
| Change from BL to End of Treatment |
0.3 (1.22)* |
1.8 (1.47) |
* p<0.001 for the difference in least square means of the change from BL to Week 27/End of Treatment (LOCF principle) between Velphoro maintenance dose and low dose using a covariance analysis (MIXED Model).
Notes: BL is Week 24 or latest value available before Week 24 when Week 24 result is missing; End of Treatment is Week 27 value or includes the latest evaluable measurement after Week 24 (i.e., LOCF). BL = Baseline; LOCF = Last observation carried forward; SD = Standard deviation. |
Following completion of Study-05A, 658 patients (597 on hemodialysis and 61 on peritoneal dialysis) were treated in the 28-week extension study (Study-05B) with either Velphoro (N=391) or sevelamer carbonate (N=267) according to their original randomization.
Serum phosphorus levels declined rapidly during the first few weeks of treatment and remained relatively constant thereafter. The phosphorus lowering effect of Velphoro was consistently maintained and controlled through 12 months of treatment (shown in Figure 1). The proportion of adherent patients for Velphoro was 86% at 52 weeks.
Figure 1 Mean change (±SEM) from baseline in serum phosphorus over time in Study05A and extension Study–05B. Insert showing the mean change (±SEM) from baseline in serum phosphorus during the withdrawal phase of the study (Weeks 24 to 27) for Velphoro non-effective low dose control (250 mg/day) versus Velphoro maintenance dose.
Age, gender, race, or dialysis modality did not affect the efficacy of Velphoro.
There were no clinically meaningful changes for serum iron, ferritin, TSAT levels, vitamins (A, D, E and K) with Velphoro. There was no evidence of accumulation of iron during one year treatment.
Pediatric Study
A clinical study of Velphoro (NCT02688764) was conducted in pediatric patients with hyperphosphatemia and advanced CKD (defined as an estimated glomerular filtration rate <30 mL/min/l.73m2 or CKD on dialysis). Following a washout period of up to 3 weeks, 78 patients 6 to 18 years of age were randomized to Velphoro (N=60) or active control calcium acetate (Phoslyra) (N=18) for a 10-week dose titration period, followed by a 24-week safety extension. Approximately 81% of patients were CKD patients on dialysis (69% on hemodialysis and 12% on peritoneal dialysis). 43 patients randomized to Velphoro completed the dose titration period.
The least squares (LS) mean reduction in serum phosphorus levels from baseline to the end of the dose titration period in the Velphoro group (N=59) was -0.52 mg/dL (95% CI: -0.97, -0.07). The percentage of patients with serum phosphorus levels within normal ranges increased from 39% at baseline to 64% at the end of the dose titration period.
Velphoro is not approved in pediatric patients 6 years to less than 9 years of age because of the lack of an appropriate dosage strength.
The median prescribed daily dose of Velphoro was approximately 1500 mg during the dose titration period for patients 9 to 18 years of age.