As BMS-820836 causes dose-dependent heart rate increases, QTcI, QTcF, QTcB, and QT beat-to-beat methods were compared in this thorough QT study in healthy subjects. Two parallel groups of subjects (n = 60 per group) received 2 mg (maximum therapeutic) or 4 mg (supratherapeutic) of BMS-820836 once daily for 14 days with uptitration. Another 60 subjects received encapsulated moxifloxacin (400 mg) or matching placebo in a nested-crossover study design. Compared with QTcF and QTcB, baseline QTcI had the smallest and near-zero Pearson correlation coefficient with heart rate (0.0938), which supported the choice of QTcI as the primary electrocardiographic end point. BMS-820836 was not associated with prolongation of the QT interval at the doses tested; however, ΔΔQTbtb showed the smallest deviation from 0 milliseconds compared with ΔΔQTcI and ΔΔQTcF. The ΔΔQTbtb results appeared to be more consistent with the very low likelihood of any effect on the QT interval by BMS-820836 based on the wide margin (>400×) of the in vitro hERG IC50 and free plasma concentration. Further, this is the first published study that used the nested-crossover design and QTbtb analysis in a thorough QT study. Assay sensitivity was confirmed with encapsulated moxifloxacin.
Keywords: BMS-820836; QT beat-to-beat; QT/QTc interval; nested-crossover; thorough QT.
© 2015, The American College of Clinical Pharmacology.