Literature DB >> 25500831

Increased permeability-glycoprotein inhibition at the human blood-brain barrier can be safely achieved by performing PET during peak plasma concentrations of tariquidar.

William C Kreisl1, Ritwik Bhatia2, Cheryl L Morse2, Alicia E Woock2, Sami S Zoghbi2, H Umesha Shetty2, Victor W Pike2, Robert B Innis2.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: The permeability-glycoprotein (P-gp) efflux transporter is densely expressed at the blood-brain barrier, and its resultant spare capacity requires substantial blockade to increase the uptake of avid substrates, blunting the ability of investigators to measure clinically meaningful alterations in P-gp function. This study, conducted in humans, examined 2 P-gp inhibitors (tariquidar, a known inhibitor, and disulfiram, a putative inhibitor) and 2 routes of administration (intravenous and oral) to maximally increase brain uptake of the avid and selective P-gp substrate (11)C-N-desmethyl-loperamide (dLop) while avoiding side effects associated with high doses of tariquidar.
METHODS: Forty-two (11)C-dLop PET scans were obtained from 37 healthy volunteers. PET was performed with (11)C-dLop under the following 5 conditions: injected under baseline conditions without P-gp inhibition, injected 1 h after intravenous tariquidar infusion, injected during intravenous tariquidar infusion, injected after oral tariquidar, and injected after disulfiram. (11)C-dLop uptake was quantified with kinetic modeling using metabolite-corrected arterial input function or by measuring the area under the time-activity curve in the brain from 10 to 30 min.
RESULTS: Neither oral tariquidar nor oral disulfiram increased brain uptake of (11)C-dLop. Injecting (11)C-dLop during tariquidar infusion, when plasma tariquidar concentrations reach their peak, resulted in a brain uptake of the radioligand approximately 5-fold greater than baseline. Brain uptake was similar with 2 and 4 mg of intravenous tariquidar per kilogram; however, the lower dose was better tolerated. Injecting (11)C-dLop after tariquidar infusion also increased brain uptake, though higher doses (up to 6 mg/kg) were required. Brain uptake of (11)C-dLop increased fairly linearly with increasing plasma tariquidar concentrations, but we are uncertain whether maximal uptake was achieved.
CONCLUSION: We sought to increase the dynamic range of P-gp function measured after blockade. Performing (11)C-dLop PET during peak plasma concentrations of tariquidar, achieved with concurrent administration of intravenous tariquidar, resulted in greater P-gp inhibition at the human blood-brain barrier than delayed administration and allowed the use of a lower, more tolerable dose of tariquidar. On the basis of prior monkey studies, we suspect that plasma concentrations of tariquidar did not fully block P-gp; however, higher doses of tariquidar would likely be associated with unacceptable side effects.
© 2015 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  N-desmethyl-loperamide; P-glycoprotein (P-gp); positron emission tomography (PET); tariquidar

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25500831      PMCID: PMC4495896          DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.114.146894

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Nucl Med        ISSN: 0161-5505            Impact factor:   10.057


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