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Using exploratory pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic analyses to predict the probability of flu-like symptoms in healthy volunteers and patients with chronic hepatitis B treated with the toll-like receptor 7 agonist ruzotolimod.

Qiudi JiangYuchen ZhangDan DuanSylvie RetoutRuchi UpmanyuKaterina GlaviniMiriam TriyatniYonghong ZhuJoseph F GrippoYuyan Jin
Published in: Clinical and translational science (2024)
Ruzotolimod (Toll-like receptor 7 (TLR7) agonist, RG7854) is an oral, small molecule immuno-modulator activating the TLR 7 and is being evaluated in patients with CHB. As with other TLR7 agonists, the study drug-related adverse events of flu-like symptoms have been reported in some participants during phase I studies with ruzotolimod. An exploratory analysis of the relationship between pharmacokinetic (PK)/pharmacodynamic (PD) and flu-like symptoms was performed in participants from two phase I studies including both healthy volunteers and NUC-suppressed CHB patients who received either single or multiple ascending doses of orally administered ruzotolimod. Linear and logistic regression were used to explore potential relationships between dose, flu-like symptoms, PK, and PD. Generalized linear regression was performed to predict the probability of flu-like symptoms of all intensities at different RO7011785 (the active metabolite of the double prodrug ruzotolimod) PK exposure. This analysis showed that single or multiple doses of ruzotolimod at ⩾100 mg, the immune PD (IFN-α, neopterin, IP-10, and the transcriptional expression of ISG15, OAS-1, MX1, and TLR7) responses increase with the RO7011785 PK exposure, which increases linearly with the doses from 3 mg to 170 mg of ruzotolimod. The analysis also showed that the probability of flu-like symptoms occurrence increases with PD responses (IFN-α and IP-10). Dose reduction of ruzotolimod can be an effective way to reduce the magnitude of PD response, thus reducing the probability of study drug-related flu-like symptoms occurrence at all intensity in the participants who are highly sensitive to PD activation and intolerant to flu-like symptoms.
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