Abstract Context Intramuscular (IM) testosterone enanthate (TE) and testosterone pellets were US Food and Drug Administration approved before 1962 for pediatric use but not studied in controlled trials in adolescents.… Click to show full abstract
Abstract Context Intramuscular (IM) testosterone enanthate (TE) and testosterone pellets were US Food and Drug Administration approved before 1962 for pediatric use but not studied in controlled trials in adolescents. Objective An analysis using nonlinear mixed effect (NLME) modeling was designed to evaluate the adult pharmacokinetics (PK) of subcutaneous (SC) and IM TE. This model was used to simulate SC and IM TE administration in adolescents of different weight groups. Methods Data from adult male patients in a phase 2 trial were used to characterize the PK of TE using population PK modeling for SC and IM administration: Allometry was used to scale PK parameters from the adult model to simulate adolescent (aged 12 to < 18 years) serum testosterone levels at body weights of 30, 40, 50, and 60 kg after weekly, every-other-week (EOW), and monthly SC and IM administration of 12.5, 25, 50, 75, and 100 mg TE regimens. Results The final data set included 714 samples from 15 patients receiving 100 mg SC TE and 123 samples from 10 patients receiving 200 mg IM TE. In simulated populations, average serum concentration SC:IM ratios were 0.783, 0.776, and 0.757 at steady state for weekly, EOW, and monthly dosing groups, respectively. Simulated regimens of 12.5 mg SC TE monthly produced serum testosterone levels representative of early puberty and simulated pubertal stage progression following multiple subsequent testosterone dose increases. Conclusion SC TE administration achieved a testosterone exposure-response relationship similar to IM TE in simulated adolescent hypogonadal males, which may reduce size of fluctuations in serum T and related symptoms.
               
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