Population pharmacokinetic modelling of fibrinogen in patients with congenital or acquired-chronic or acute-hypofibrinogenaemia

Br J Clin Pharmacol. 2023 Sep;89(9):2703-2713. doi: 10.1111/bcp.15741. Epub 2023 May 2.

Abstract

Aims: Fibrinogen is the key substrate for coagulation. Fibrinogen pharmacokinetics (PK) after single doses of fibrinogen concentrate (FC), using modelling approaches, has only been evaluated in congenital afibrinogenaemic patients. The aims of this study are to characterize the fibrinogen PK in patients with acquired-chronic (cirrhosis) or acute-hypofibrinogenaemia (critical haemorrhage), showing endogenous production. Influencing factors of differences on the fibrinogen PK between subpopulations will be identified.

Methods: A total of 428 time-concentration values from 132 patients were recorded. Eighty-two out of 428 values were from 41 cirrhotic patients administered with placebo and 90 out of 428 were from 45 cirrhotic patients that were given FC, 161 out of 428 values were from 14 afibrinogenaemic patients and 95 out of 428 values were from 32 severe acute trauma haemorrhagic patients. A turnover model that accounted for endogenous production and exogenous dose was fitted using NONMEM74. The production rate (Ksyn), distribution volume (V), plasma clearance (CL) and concentration yielding to 50% of maximal fibrinogen production (EC50) were estimated.

Results: Fibrinogen disposition was described by a one-compartment model with CL and V values of 0.0456 L·h-1 and 4.34 L·70 kg-1 , respectively. Body weight was statistically significant in V. Three different Ksyn values were identified that increased from 0.00439 g·h-1 (afibrinogenaemia), to 0.0768 g·h-1 (cirrhotics) and 0.1160 g·h-1 (acute severe trauma). EC50 was of 0.460 g·L-1 .

Conclusions: This model will be key as a support tool for dose calculation to achieve specified target fibrinogen concentrations, in each of the studied populations.

Keywords: Coagulation Physiology; Haematology; Pharmacokinetics; Pharmacometrics.

MeSH terms

  • Afibrinogenemia* / drug therapy
  • Blood Coagulation
  • Fibrinogen* / therapeutic use
  • Hemorrhage
  • Humans
  • Liver Cirrhosis

Substances

  • Fibrinogen