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A novel long-acting formulation of oral buprenorphine/naloxone produces prolonged decreases in fentanyl self-administration by rhesus monkeys
- Source :
- Drug and alcohol dependence. 239
- Publication Year :
- 2022
-
Abstract
- Due to the poor oral bioavailability of buprenorphine, an oral formulation has not been thought possible. Lyndra Therapeutics is developing a once-weekly long-acting oral product containing buprenorphine. We evaluated the efficacy of this formulation in reducing intravenous (i.v.) fentanyl self-administration by three male and three female rhesus monkeys.Buprenorphine HCl and naloxone HCl were co-formulated using an 11:1 ratio of buprenorphine:naloxone in a controlled-release gastric residence formulation administered in an oral capsule (LYN-013). Naloxone was included to determine the feasibility of combining naloxone with buprenorphine in the formulation as an abuse deterrent. Complete fentanyl dose-response functions were determined during each session. The efficacy of single doses of 56/5, 112/10 and 168/15 mg buprenorphine/naloxone in reducing fentanyl self-administration was examined over 13 days.LYN-013 significantly decreased the rate of responding for fentanyl for 3 days and significantly reduced total intake of fentanyl for 8 days. Time to maximal buprenorphine levels (Tmax) ranged between 56 and 68 h for all 3 doses. The maximal buprenorphine level (Cmax) following 168 mg was 2.3 ng/ml which was significantly greater that those observed for 56 mg (1.22 ng/ml) and 112 mg (1.35 ng/ml). Finally, the area-under-curves (AUCtau) were buprenorphine dose-dependently increased from 88 to 127-265 h*ng/ml. There were no signs of non-specific changes in behavior.A once-weekly oral buprenorphine/naloxone formulation produced sustained suppression of fentanyl self-administration in monkeys suggesting that oral delivery of buprenorphine with this formulation could provide a new opportunity to treat opioid use disorders (OUD).
Details
- ISSN :
- 18790046
- Volume :
- 239
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Drug and alcohol dependence
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c7e74af7c94c6bc214aec5379b3bfc0b