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Estimation of the comparative therapeutic superiority of QD and BID dosing regimens, based on integrated analysis of dosing history data and pharmacokinetics
Authors:Laetitia Comté  Bernard Vrijens  Eric Tousset  Paul Gérard  John Urquhart
Affiliation:(1) Department of Mathematics, University of Liège, B37, 12, Grande Traverse, Liege, 4000, Belgium;(2) Biostatistical Research Centre, Pharmionic Systems Ltd., Vise, Belgium;(3) Department of Biopharmaceutical Sciences, Center for Drug Development Science, University of California, San Francisco Medical Center, San Francisco, CA, USA
Abstract:
Once-daily dosing almost invariably shows a slightly higher percentage of prescribed doses taken than does twice-daily dosing. Many pharmaceutical scientists, regulators, and prescribers have considered this finding to signify the therapeutic superiority of once-daily dosing. The therapeutically more relevant question, however, is not the percentage of prescribed doses taken but the comparative impact of missed doses on the pharmacologic effects of a drug under the two dosing regimens. A key point in this regard is that the pharmacokinetic equivalent of a single missed once-daily dose is 2–3 sequentially omitted twice-daily doses. Thus, an important parameter in comparing the two regimens is the probability of two or three twice-daily doses being sequentially omitted, versus the probability of missing a single once-daily dose. Our data indicate that the probability of sequential omission of 2–3 twice daily doses is half the probability of omission of a single once-daily dose. For that reason, a twice-daily regimen could prove to be superior to a once-daily regimen in maintaining drug concentrations within a therapeutically desirable range. A more important consideration, however, is to maintain not just the concentration of drug in plasma, but the drug’s therapeutic action. The duration of therapeutic drug action following a last-taken dose is not only drug-specific, but also, for some drug, dependent on the pharmacodynamic properties. Judging the comparative superiority of one dosing regimen over another requires knowledge of the drug’s duration action after a last-taken dose, plus knowledge of the comparative probabilities of the various patterns of dose omission. When applied to HIV protease inhibitors, a twice-daily regimen appears to be better than an once-daily regimen in maintaining therapeutically effective drug actions.
Keywords:Adherence  Compliance-HIV  Time history of drug intake  PI concentration in plasma  Drug dosing regimens  Once-daily dosing  Twice-daily dosing  Pharmacokinetics  Pharmacodynamics  Systems therapeutics
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