The pharmacokinetics and Concentration-QTc analysis of a new etomidate analog ET-26-HCl: a phase I trial in healthy Chinese subjects
Kun He, Wenyu Zhang, Xiangran Kong, Lize Li, Lei Diao, Qing Wen, Guohai Su, Xiaoran Yang, Hongyan Zhao

TL;DR
A new anesthetic drug, ET-26-HCl, was tested in healthy people to assess its safety and effectiveness, showing no risk of heart rhythm issues.
Contribution
ET-26-HCl is a novel etomidate analog with reduced adrenal impact and no QT interval prolongation risk, validated through a phase I trial.
Findings
ET-26-HCl showed rapid onset and recovery with no QT interval prolongation risk at tested doses.
Pharmacokinetic data confirmed safety and dose-dependent sedative effects in healthy Chinese subjects.
Abstract
Methoxetamine hydrochloride (ET-26-HCl) is a novel short-acting intravenous general anesthetic that retains the advantages of etomidate while minimizing its impact on adrenal cortical function. A single-center, randomized, open-label, placebo-controlled clinical trial was conducted using concentration-QTc (C-QTc) model analysis to evaluate the pharmacokinetics, clinical sedative effect, safety, and potential risk of QT interval prolongation of ET-26-HCl at doses of 0.8 mg/kg (the clinical dosage) and 2.8 mg/kg. In the 0.8 mg/kg group, the mean peak concentration (C max) of ET-26 was 1,510 ng/mL with upper limits of the 90% confidence interval (CI) for QTcF interval corrected by baseline and placebo (ΔΔQTcF) falling within an acceptable range, not exceeding ±10 ms (−1.543 ms to +2.788 ms). The 2.8 mg/kg group exhibited a higher C max value for ET-26, along with corresponding mean ΔΔQTcF…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCardiac electrophysiology and arrhythmias · Receptor Mechanisms and Signaling · Antibiotics Pharmacokinetics and Efficacy
