Model-Based Evaluation of Exenatide Effects on the QT Interval in Healthy Subjects Following Continuous IV Infusion.
J Clin Pharmacol · 2017
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study of healthy subjects given exenatide through IV infusion, the drug reduced blood sugar spikes after meals and increased heart rate. The study found that exenatide’s effects on blood sugar and heart rate fully explained changes in the QT interval, a measure of heart rhythm, without needing to account for additional drug effects. Exenatide doses were adjusted to maintain plasma levels above 200 pg/mL, and the dose linked to a 50% increase in heart rate was 584 pg/mL.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | J Clin Pharmacol, 2017 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 3 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.12 |
| NIH percentile | 8 |
| Molecules | exenatide |
Abstract
Investigation of the cardiovascular proarrhythmic potential of a new chemical entity is now an integral part of drug development. Studies suggest that meals and glycemic changes can influence QT intervals, and a semimechanistic model has been developed that incorporates the effects of changes in glucose concentrations on heart rate (HR) and QT intervals. This analysis aimed to adapt the glucose-HR-QT model to incorporate the effects of exenatide, a drug that reduces postprandial increases in glucose concentrations. The final model includes stimulatory drug effects on glucose elimination and HR perturbations. The targeted and constant exenatide plasma concentrations (>200 pg/mL), via intravenous infusions at multiple dose levels, resulted in significant inhibition of glucose concentrations. The exenatide concentration associated with 50% of the stimulation of HR production was 584 pg/mL. After accounting for exenatide effects on glucose and HR, no additional drug effects were required to explain observed changes in the QT interval. Resulting glucose, HR, and QT profiles at all exenatide concentrations were adequately described. For therapeutic agents that alter glycemic conditions, particularly those that alter postprandial glucose, the QT interval cannot be directly compared to that with placebo without first accounting for confounding factors (eg, glucose) either through mathematical modeling or careful consideration of mealtime placement in the study design.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 28543393 ↗
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