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Remdesivir for COVID-19 in Hospitalized Children: A Phase 2/3 Study

Amina Ahmed, Flor M. Muñoz, William J. Muller, Allison L. Agwu, David W. Kimberlin, Luisa Galli, Jaime G. Deville, Paul K. Sue, Ana Méndez‐Echevarría, Rita Humeniuk, Susan Guo, Lauren Rodriguez, Dong Han, Charlotte Hedskog, Heather Maxwell, Ramesh Palaparthy, Kathryn Kersey, Pablo Rojo, CARAVAN Study Investigators

2024PEDIATRICS12 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Remdesivir decreases the risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection progressing to severe disease in adults. This study evaluated remdesivir safety and pharmacokinetics in infants and children. METHODS: This was a phase 2/3, open-label trial in children aged 28 days to 17 years hospitalized for polymerase chain reaction-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection. Participants received for ≤10 days once-daily intravenous remdesivir doses defined using physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling (for ≥40 kg, 200 mg day 1, then 100 mg/day; for age ≥28 days and ≥3 to <40 kg, 5 mg/kg day 1, then 2.5 mg/kg/day). Sparse pharmacokinetic samples were analyzed using population-pharmacokinetic approaches for remdesivir and metabolites GS-704277 and GS-441524. RESULTS: Among 53 participants, at enrollment the median (Q1, Q3) number of days of COVID-19 symptoms was 5 (3, 7) and hospitalization was 1 (1, 3). Underlying conditions included obesity in 19 (37%), asthma in 11 (21%), and cardiac disorders in 11 (21%). Median duration of remdesivir treatment was 5 days (range, 1-10). Remdesivir treatment had no new apparent safety trends. Two participants discontinued treatment because of adverse events including elevated transaminases; both had elevated transaminases at baseline. Three deaths occurred during treatment (and 1 after). When compared with phase 3 adult data, estimated mean pediatric parameters (area under the concentration-time curve over 1 dosing interval, AUCτ, Cmax, and Cτ) were largely overlapping but modestly increased (remdesivir, 33%-129%; GS-704277, 37%-124%; GS-441524, 0%-60%). Recovery occurred for 62% of participants on day 10 and 83% at last assessment. CONCLUSIONS: In infants and children with COVID-19, the doses of remdesivir evaluated provided drug exposure similar to adult dosing. In this study with a small sample size, no new safety concerns were observed.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePharmacokineticsDosingCmaxConfidence intervalAdverse effectPopulationInternal medicineCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)PediatricsDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)Environmental healthCOVID-19 Clinical Research StudiesSARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 ResearchPharmacological Receptor Mechanisms and Effects
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