1. THE PHARMACOKINETIC ADVANTAGE OF LOCAL 6-MERCAPTOPURINE INFUSION IN A CANINE RENAL TRANSPLANT MODEL1,2
- Author
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SCOTT A. GRUBER, DANIEL M. CANAFAX, GARY R. ERDMANN, ROBERT J. CIPOLLE, BARBARA A. BURKE, JEFFREY T. RABATIN, PATRICIA E. HYNES, FRED H. GOULD, JOHN E. HEIL, NANCY L. ASCHER, RICHARD L. SIMMONS, JOHN S. NAJARIAN, and WILLIAM J. M. HRUSHESKY
- Subjects
Transplantation ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Renal function ,Anastomosis ,Pharmacology ,medicine.disease ,Thrombosis ,Catheter ,Bolus (medicine) ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Jugular vein ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,business ,Saline ,Artery - Abstract
In light of recent technologic advances, we developed a canine renal allograft model utilizing implantable, programmable infusion pumps and biocompatible catheters to reexplore the concept of local immunosuppression. Thirteen mongrel dogs underwent bilateral nephrectomy and autotransplantation of 1 kidney via end-to-end renal-iliac artery and end-to-side renal-iliac vein anastomoses. The proximal end of an infusion catheter directed into the iliac artery was tunneled to a subcutaneously placed programmable pump. A second, sampling catheter was placed with its tip in the iliac vein just proximal to the venous anastomosis. During a period of i.a. infusion of heparinized saline ranging from 19 to 63 days, serum creatinine remained normal in all but 1 animal, which developed pyelonephritis and catheter-tip perforation of the iliac artery. No cases of arterial thrombosis or catheter migration were observed at necropsy. In 7 additional autotransplanted dogs, simultaneous iliac vein and systemic (jugular vein) concentrations of 6-mercaptopurine (6-MP), the major immunosuppressive metabolite of azathioprine, were determined during a continuous 24-hr i.a. infusion (10 mg/kg/24 hr). Following termination of the infusion, 10 mg/kg 6-MP was administered to the same 7 dogs as an i.v. bolus, and systemic drug concentrations were determined over a 4-hr period. Mean +/- SE total-body clearance and elimination half-life were 887 +/- 159 ml/min and 1.4 +/- 0.2 hr, respectively, in the i.v. bolus study, indicating that 6-MP is rapidly cleared from the systemic circulation. Unexpectedly, the kidney removed as much as 60-95% of locally infused 6-MP, reducing the amount of active drug entering the systemic circulation to 5-40% of that which would be present during an i.v. infusion of the same dose. According to the principles governing the advantages of i.a. infusions, these data demonstrate that 6-MP can be infused intrarenally to produce both a 4-fold increase in drug concentration within the kidney and an 80% decrease in systemic drug delivery when compared to same-dose i.v. administration. The overall result is the presence of a 30-fold gradient between local and systemic drug concentrations during intrarenal 6-MP infusion. We conclude that i.a. infusion of an immunosuppressive agent is technically feasible with preservation of renal function, and that 6-MP can be delivered locally in a canine model with great pharmacokinetic and potential therapeutic advantage.
- Published
- 1989
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