| Literature DB >> 12645996 |
John Mao1, Yang Xu, Diana Wu, Bijan Almassain.
Abstract
VNP40101M (1,2-Bis(methylsulfonyl)-1-(2-chloroethyl)-2-[(2 methylamino)carbonyl] hydrazine), a novel DNA alkylating agent, is currently under clinical development for the treatment of cancer in Phase I clinical trials. This study investigated the pharmacokinetics, mass balance, and tissue distribution of [14C]-VNP40101M in rats following a single intravenous dose of 10 mg/kg. After 7 days, the total recovery of radioactivity was 85% for males and 79% for females. Most of the radioactivity was eliminated within 48 hours through urine (70%), with less excreted in feces (6%). Tissue contained relatively high radioactive residues with the highest concentrations in kidneys, liver, lung, and spleen. After 7 days, tissue still contained 9% of the dose. At both 5 minutes and 1 hour post-dose, brain contained relatively high radioactivity (5.9 and 3.3 micro g equivalence/g and 50% and 30% of the blood concentration, respectively), suggesting that VNP40101M penetrated the blood-brain barrier. The elimination half-life of VNP40101M was approximately 20 minutes, the peak plasma concentration (Cmax) averaged 11.3 micro g/mL, the volume of distribution (Vss) averaged 0.91 L/kg, and the total body clearance (Cl) averaged 33.5 mL/min/kg. The metabolite profile in urine was complex, indicating VNP40101M was extensively metabolized. There were no apparent sex differences in pharmacokinetic parameters of VNP40101M in the rat.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12645996 PMCID: PMC2751313 DOI: 10.1208/ps040424
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AAPS PharmSci ISSN: 1522-1059