Article date: December 2018
By: Marie‐Rose B.S. Crombag, Jacobine G.C. Doremalen, Julie M. Janssen, Hilde Rosing, Jan H.M. Schellens, Jos H. Beijnen, Neeltje Steeghs, Alwin D.R. Huitema in Volume 84, Issue 12, pages 2770-2778
Aim
Pharmacokinetics of small molecule kinase inhibitors (KIs) used in cancer treatment may alter with increasing age, but results are conflicting. This study aims to compare exposure to KIs between older and younger patients (≥70 and <70 years) in clinical practice.
Methods
KI plasma concentrations of routinely treated patients were measured using validated assays. Calculated trough concentrations were compared in both age groups. For KIs with a clinically meaningful target concentration (erlotinib, imatinib, pazopanib, sunitinib and vemurafenib), influence of older age on target attainment was assessed.
Results
We analysed 616 samples from 454 patients (median age: 61; range 20–93 years), treated with dabrafenib (n = 105), erlotinib (n = 49), imatinib (n = 165), pazopanib (n = 63), sunitinib (n = 87), trametinib (n = 95) and vemurafenib (n = 52). Older age did not significantly influence exposure to erlotinib, imatinib, pazopanib, sunitinib, trametinib and vemurafenib. Elderly patients had significantly higher dabrafenib trough concentrations than younger patients (P = 0.02; 62 ng ml−1 (coefficient of variation [CV] 41%), vs. 53 ng ml−1 (CV 46%), respectively). For KIs with a predefined target concentration, 68% of older and 61% of younger patients reached target.
Conclusions
In this real‐world study, exposure to most included KIs was comparable in older and younger patients, except for dabrafenib, which showed higher exposure in older patients. In the absence of an absolute target for this KI, clinical relevance remains unclear. For all other included KIs, our data suggest no clinically relevant influence of older age on KI exposure.
DOI: 10.1111/bcp.13725
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