| Literature DB >> 1990238 |
P R Pentel1, G J Brunn, S M Pond, D E Keyler.
Abstract
The effect of a drug-specific antibody on desipramine (DMI) cardiotoxicity was studied in rats. Animals were pretreated i.v. with 4.2 g/kg of a monoclonal antibody (anti-TCA) followed by DMI HCl 30 mg/kg i.p. (molar ratio of anti-TCA binding sites to DMI = 0.56). Peak QRS complex prolongation was substantially lower after pretreatment with anti-TCA than after control antibody (70 +/- 14 v. 21 +/- 4%, p less than 0.001). Time to peak toxicity was the same in both groups. Binding of DMI by anti-TCA was demonstrated by a higher serum total DMI concentration and increased DMI binding in serum after anti-TCA compared to controls. The DMI concentration in anti-TCA treated animals was lower in some organs (brain, lung, liver, spleen), but not in others (heart, muscle, kidney, fat). The calculated fraction of the DMI dose bound by anti-TCA was 19.9%. The steepness of the DMI dose-response curve was examined by administering DMI alone (without antibody) at various doses to rats. Compared to 30 mg/kg DMI, a dose reduction of 30-50% was needed to reduce QRS duration to the same extent as anti-TCA pretreatment. We conclude that DMI cardiotoxicity was markedly reduced by the binding of a relative small fraction of the DMI body burden to anti-TCA. This disproportionate effect of DMI binding was not due to the steepness of the DMI dose-response curve, nor to slowing of the rate of DMI distribution to tissues.Entities:
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Year: 1991 PMID: 1990238 DOI: 10.1016/0024-3205(91)90543-k
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Life Sci ISSN: 0024-3205 Impact factor: 5.037