1. Short Communication: Specimen Processing Impacts Tissue Tenofovir Pharmacokinetic Measurements.
- Author
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Bakshi RP, Breakey J, Manohar M, Jois B, Fuchs EJ, and Marzinke MA
- Subjects
- Adenine administration & dosage, Adenine analogs & derivatives, Adenine pharmacokinetics, Administration, Oral, Anti-HIV Agents administration & dosage, Biopsy, Culture Media, HIV Infections prevention & control, Humans, Male, Organophosphates administration & dosage, Organophosphates pharmacokinetics, Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis, Rectum pathology, Tenofovir administration & dosage, Anti-HIV Agents pharmacokinetics, Rectum metabolism, Specimen Handling standards, Tenofovir pharmacokinetics
- Abstract
Antiretroviral drug concentrations at sites of HIV exposure are important drivers that influence the development of HIV pre-exposure chemoprophylaxis strategies and regimens. We assessed the effect of collection method-in the presence or absence of tissue culture medium-on tenofovir (TFV) and tenofovir diphosphate (TFV-DP) concentrations in colonic biopsies. We find significant baseline interbiopsy variation in TFV (38% CV) and TFV-DP (33% CV) concentrations. Incubation in medium leads to a fluid absorption-driven twofold increase in tissue weight with a concomitant 75% decrease in weight-adjusted tissue TFV concentrations 120 min post-incubation. In contrast, adjusted TFV-DP concentrations decrease by only 25% during the same period, with this difference not achieving statistical significance. Although colonic biopsies should be collected in the absence of medium for accurate TFV concentrations, the presence of medium does not significantly impact TFV-DP-dependent pharmacokinetic or pharmacodynamic assays. Appropriate assessment of tissue drug concentrations should account for biopsy collection method and drug mechanism of action.
- Published
- 2018
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