Background and objectives: As the prevalence of some gynecological conditions depends on patient characteristics such as race/ethnicity, it is important to study therapies for these conditions in diverse populations. The study described in this article was conducted to investigate the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of vilaprisan, a selective progesterone receptor modulator, in Japanese women in Japan. It supplements two comparable studies that were conducted in healthy postmenopausal European and Chinese women, respectively.
Methods: In this exploratory randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, ascending-dose study, five groups of healthy postmenopausal Japanese women received vilaprisan as immediate-release tablets (1, 5, or 15 mg as a single dose or 1 or 5 mg/day for 28 days) or placebo tablets (single dosing: 8 subjects/dose step, thereof 2 subjects randomized to placebo; multiple dosing: 12 subjects/dose step, thereof 4 subjects randomized to placebo). Blood samples for pharmacokinetic profiles were collected over 14-19 days. Safety assessments were based on adverse event data, vital signs, electrocardiograms, clinical laboratory tests, and transvaginal ultrasound examinations.
Results: 48 participants were randomized, treated, and analyzed. Vilaprisan was rapidly absorbed, reaching maximum plasma concentrations (Cmax) between 1 and 3 h post dose. Post maximum, plasma concentrations rapidly declined, indicating pronounced distribution into tissues. The exposure of vilaprisan increased roughly dose-proportionally: The geometric mean (geometric coefficients of variation) areas under the concentration time curves from time zero to infinity (AUC∞) after single administration of 1, 5, or 15 mg vilaprisan were 67 µg·h/l (34%), 249 µg·h/l (15%), and 788 µg·h/l (37%), respectively. The AUC in the dosing interval after multiple administrations (AUC24,md) of 1 mg/day was 76 µg·h/l (59%), and the AUC24,md after 5 mg/day was 311 µg·h/l (20%). Geometric mean Cmax values also increased roughly dose-proportionally: They amounted to 6 µg/l (22%), 16 µg/l (33%), and 52 µg/l (27%) after single administration and to 8 µg/l (28%) and 31 µg/l (22%) after multiple administrations of the above doses. Mild adverse events were observed, similar to those observed in other clinical studies of vilaprisan.
Conclusions: Overall, vilaprisan was safe and well tolerated. The exposure in Japanese women was similar to that observed in European and Chinese women in separate studies.
Trial registration: 15 Nov 2011 (no registration number assigned).
© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.