Physiologically based pharmacokinetic modelling of semaglutide in children and adolescents with healthy and obese body weights.
Br J Clin Pharmacol · 2023
Last updated 2026-05-28Researchers created a model to estimate how the GLP-1 drug semaglutide moves through the body in children and teens with normal and obese body weights. Their simulations showed that children aged 10–14 may have higher peak drug levels than adults at the same dose, which could increase the risk of side effects like stomach issues. The model also confirmed that higher body weight is linked to lower peak drug levels in kids, similar to findings in adults.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Br J Clin Pharmacol, 2023 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 7 |
| Relative citation ratio | 1.16 |
| NIH percentile | 55 |
| Molecules | semaglutide |
| Conditions studied | Obesity |
Abstract
AIMS: To develop paediatric physiologically based pharmacokinetic modelling (PBPK) models of semaglutide to estimate the pharmacokinetic profile for subcutaneous injections in children and adolescents with healthy and obese body weights.
METHODS: Pharmacokinetic modelling and simulations of semaglutide subcutaneous injections were performed using the Transdermal Compartmental Absorption & Transit model implemented in GastroPlus v.9.5 modules. A PBPK model of semaglutide was developed and verified in the adult population, by comparing the simulated plasma exposure with the observed data, and further scaled to the paediatric populations with normal and obese body weight.
RESULTS: The semaglutide PBPK model was successfully developed in adults and scaled to the paediatric population. Our paediatric PBPK simulations indicated a significant increase in maximum plasma concentrations for the 10-14 years' paediatric population with healthy body weights, which was higher than the observed values in adults at the reference dose. Since gastrointestinal adverse events are related to increased semaglutide concentrations, peak concentrations outside the target range may represent a safety risk for this paediatric age group. Besides, paediatric PBPK models indicated that body weight was inversely related to semaglutide maximum plasma concentration, corroborating the consensus on the influence of body weight on semaglutide PK in adults.
CONCLUSION: Paediatric PBPK was successfully achieved using a top-down approach and drug-related parameters. The development of unprecedented PBPK models will support paediatric clinical therapy for applying aid-safe dosing regimens for the paediatric population in diabetes treatment.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 37293836 ↗
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