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Preclinical Evaluation of Long-Acting Emtricitabine Semi-Solid Prodrug Nanoparticle Formulations

Authors :
Paul Curley
James J. Hobson
Neill J. Liptrott
Edward Makarov
Amer Al-khouja
Lee Tatham
Christopher A. W. David
Helen Box
Megan Neary
Joanne Sharp
Henry Pertinez
David Meyers
Charles Flexner
Caren L. Freel Meyers
Larisa Poluektova
Steve Rannard
Andrew Owen
Source :
Pharmaceutics, Vol 15, Iss 7, p 1835 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2023.

Abstract

Long-acting injectable (LAI) formulations promise to deliver patient benefits by overcoming issues associated with non-adherence. A preclinical assessment of semi-solid prodrug nanoparticle (SSPN) LAI formulations of emtricitabine (FTC) is reported here. Pharmacokinetics over 28 days were assessed in Wistar rats, New Zealand white rabbits, and Balb/C mice following intramuscular injection. Two lead formulations were assessed for the prevention of an HIV infection in NSG-cmah−/− humanised mice to ensure antiviral activities were as anticipated according to the pharmacokinetics. Cmax was reached by 12, 48, and 24 h in rats, rabbits, and mice, respectively. Plasma concentrations were below the limit of detection (2 ng/mL) by 21 days in rats and rabbits, and 28 days in mice. Mice treated with SSPN formulations demonstrated undetectable viral loads (700 copies/mL detection limit), and HIV RNA remained undetectable 28 days post-infection in plasma, spleen, lung, and liver. The in vivo data presented here demonstrate that the combined prodrug/SSPN approach can provide a dramatically extended pharmacokinetic half-life across multiple preclinical species. Species differences in renal clearance of FTC mean that longer exposures are likely to be achievable in humans than in preclinical models.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19994923
Volume :
15
Issue :
7
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Pharmaceutics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.30c9897dc2e441029b763227a146a61d
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics15071835