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Zofran Injection

Clinical Pharmacology
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Clinical Pharmacology

In a study of 51 pediatric patients (1 month to 24 months of age) who were undergoing surgery requiring general anesthesia, a single I.V. dose of ondansetron, 0.1 or 0.2 mg/kg, was administered prior to surgery. As shown in Table 3, the 41 patients with pharmacokinetic data were divided into 2 groups, patients 1 month to 4 months of age and patients 5 to 24 months of age, and are compared to pediatric patients 3 to 12 years of age.

Table 3. Pharmacokinetics in Pediatric Surgery Patients 1 Month to 12 Years of Age


Subjects and Age Group N CL
(L/h/kg)
Vdss
(L/kg)
T½
(h)
    Geometric Mean Mean
Pediatric Surgery Patients 3 to 12 years of age N = 21 0.439 1.65 2.9
Pediatric Surgery Patients 5 to 24 months of age N = 22 0.581 2.3 2.9
Pediatric Surgery Patients 1 month to 4 months of age N = 19 0.401 3.5 6.7

In general, surgical and cancer pediatric patients younger than 18 years tend to have a higher ondansetron clearance compared to adults leading to a shorter half-life in most pediatric patients. In patients 1 month to 4 months of age, a longer half-life was observed due to the higher volume of distribution in this age group.

In normal volunteers (19 to 39 years old, n = 23), the peak plasma concentration was 264 ng/mL following a single 32-mg dose administered as a 15-minute I.V. infusion. The mean elimination half-life was 4.1 hours. Systemic exposure to 32 mg of ondansetron was not proportional to dose as measured by comparing dose-normalized AUC values to an 8-mg dose. This is consistent with a small decrease in systemic clearance with increasing plasma concentrations.

A study was performed in normal volunteers (n = 56) to evaluate the pharmacokinetics of a single 4-mg dose administered as a 5-minute infusion compared to a single intramuscular injection. Systemic exposure as measured by mean AUC was equivalent, with values of 156 [95% CI 136, 180] and 161 [95% CI 137, 190] ng•h/mL for I.V. and I.M. groups, respectively. Mean peak plasma concentrations were 42.9 [95% CI 33.8, 54.4] ng/mL at 10 minutes after I.V. infusion and 31.9 [95% CI 26.3, 38.6] ng/mL at 41 minutes after I.M. injection. The mean elimination half-life was not affected by route of administration.

Plasma protein binding of ondansetron as measured in vitro was 70% to 76%, with binding constant over the pharmacologic concentration range (10 to 500 ng/mL). Circulating drug also distributes into erythrocytes.

A positive lymphoblast transformation test to ondansetron has been reported, which suggests immunologic sensitivity to ondansetron.

Clinical Trials

Chemotherapy-Induced Nausea and Vomiting

Adult Studies: In a double-blind study of three different dosing regimens of ZOFRAN Injection, 0.015 mg/kg, 0.15 mg/kg, and 0.30 mg/kg, each given three times during the course of cancer chemotherapy, the 0.15-mg/kg dosing regimen was more effective than the 0.015-mg/kg dosing regimen. The 0.30-mg/kg dosing regimen was not shown to be more effective than the 0.15-mg/kg dosing regimen.

Cisplatin-Based Chemotherapy: In a double-blind study in 28 patients, ZOFRAN Injection (three 0.15-mg/kg doses) was significantly more effective than placebo in preventing nausea and vomiting induced by cisplatin-based chemotherapy. Treatment response was as shown in Table 4.

Table 4. Prevention of Chemotherapy-Induced Nausea and Vomiting in Single-Day Cisplatin Therapy* in Adults


  ZOFRAN
Injection
Placebo P Value
Number of patients 14 14  
Treatment response      
  0 Emetic episodes 2 (14%) 0 (0%)  
  1-2 Emetic episodes 8 (57%) 0 (0%)  
  3-5 Emetic episodes 2 (14%) 1 (7%)  
  More than 5 emetic episodes/rescued 2 (14%) 13 (93%) 0.001
Median number of emetic episodes 1.5 Undefined  
Median time to first emetic episode (h) 11.6 2.8 0.001
Median nausea scores (0-100)§ 3 59 0.034
Global satisfaction with control of nausea and vomiting (0-100)|| 96 10.5 0.009
* Chemotherapy was high dose (100 and 120 mg/m2; ZOFRAN Injection n = 6, placebo n = 5) or moderate dose (50 and 80 mg/m2; ZOFRAN Injection n = 8, placebo n = 9). Other chemotherapeutic agents included fluorouracil, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide. There was no difference between treatments in the types of chemotherapy that would account for differences in response.
Efficacy based on "all patients treated" analysis.
Median undefined since at least 50% of the patients were rescued or had more than five emetic episodes.
§ Visual analog scale assessment of nausea: 0 = no nausea, 100 = nausea as bad as it can be.
|| Visual analog scale assessment of satisfaction: 0 = not at all satisfied, 100 = totally satisfied.
Brand Name: Zofran Injection
Generic Name: Ondansetron Hydrochloride Injection
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