Safety, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of multiple oral doses of apixaban, a factor Xa inhibitor, in healthy subjects

Article date: November 2013

By: Charles Frost, Sunil Nepal, Jessie Wang, Alan Schuster, Wonkyung Byon, Rebecca A. Boyd, Zhigang Yu, Andrew Shenker, Yu Chen Barrett, Rogelio Mosqueda‐Garcia, Frank LaCreta, in Volume 76, Issue 5, pages 776-786

Aim

Apixaban is an oral factor Xa inhibitor approved for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation and thromboprophylaxis in patients who have undergone elective hip or knee replacement surgery and under development for treatment of venous thromboembolism. This study examined the safety, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of multiple dose apixaban.

Method

This double‐blind, randomized, placebo‐controlled, parallel group, multiple dose escalation study was conducted in six sequential dose panels – apixaban 2.5, 5, 10 and 25 mg twice daily and 10 and 25 mg once daily– with eight healthy subjects per panel. Within each panel, subjects were randomized (3:1) to oral apixaban or placebo for 7 days. Subjects underwent safety assessments and were monitored for adverse events (AEs). Blood samples were taken to measure apixaban plasma concentration, international normalized ratio (INR), activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) and modified prothrombin time (mPT).

Results

Forty‐eight subjects were randomized and treated (apixaban, n = 36; placebo, n = 12); one subject receiving 2.5 mg twice daily discontinued due to AEs (headache and nausea). No dose limiting AEs were observed. Apixaban maximum plasma concentration was achieved ∼3 h post‐dose. Exposure increased approximately in proportion to dose. Apixaban steady‐state concentrations were reached by day 3, with an accumulation index of 1.3–1.9. Peak : trough ratios were lower for twice daily vs. once daily regimens. Clotting times showed dose‐related increases tracking the plasma concentration–time profile.

Conclusion

Multiple oral doses of apixaban were safe and well tolerated over a 10‐fold dose range, with pharmacokinetics with low variability and concentration‐related increases in clotting time measures.

DOI: 10.1111/bcp.12106

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