Literature DB >> 25836959

Using dried blood spot sampling to improve data quality and reduce animal use in mouse pharmacokinetic studies.

Enaksha R Wickremsinhe1, Everett J Perkins2.   

Abstract

Traditional pharmacokinetic analysis in nonclinical studies is based on the concentration of a test compound in plasma and requires approximately 100 to 200 μL blood collected per time point. However, the total blood volume of mice limits the number of samples that can be collected from an individual animal-often to a single collection per mouse-thus necessitating dosing multiple mice to generate a pharmacokinetic profile in a sparse-sampling design. Compared with traditional methods, dried blood spot (DBS) analysis requires smaller volumes of blood (15 to 20 μL), thus supporting serial blood sampling and the generation of a complete pharmacokinetic profile from a single mouse. Here we compare plasma-derived data with DBS-derived data, explain how to adopt DBS sampling to support discovery mouse studies, and describe how to generate pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic data from a single mouse. Executing novel study designs that use DBS enhances the ability to identify and streamline better drug candidates during drug discovery. Implementing DBS sampling can reduce the number of mice needed in a drug discovery program. In addition, the simplicity of DBS sampling and the smaller numbers of mice needed translate to decreased study costs. Overall, DBS sampling is consistent with 3Rs principles by achieving reductions in the number of animals used, decreased restraint-associated stress, improved data quality, direct comparison of interanimal variability, and the generation of multiple endpoints from a single study.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25836959      PMCID: PMC4382617     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Assoc Lab Anim Sci        ISSN: 1559-6109            Impact factor:   1.232


  30 in total

1.  Pharmacokinetic considerations as to when to use dried blood spot sampling.

Authors:  Gary Emmons; Malcom Rowland
Journal:  Bioanalysis       Date:  2010-11       Impact factor: 2.681

2.  Perforated dried blood spot accurate microsampling: the concept and its applications in toxicokinetic sample collection.

Authors:  Fumin Li; Stephen Ploch; Douglas Fast; Steve Michael
Journal:  J Mass Spectrom       Date:  2012-05       Impact factor: 1.982

3.  Application of automated serial blood sampling and dried blood spot technique with liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry for pharmacokinetic studies in mice.

Authors:  Philip Wong; Roger Pham; Carl Whitely; Marcus Soto; Kevin Salyers; Christopher James; Bernd A Bruenner
Journal:  J Pharm Biomed Anal       Date:  2011-07-01       Impact factor: 3.935

4.  Dried blood spot sampling: coupling bioanalytical feasibility, blood-plasma partitioning and transferability to in vivo preclinical studies.

Authors:  Enaksha R Wickremsinhe; Basira G Abdul; Naijia H Huang; John W Richard; Jennifer L Hanes; Kenneth J Ruterbories; Everett J Perkins; Ajai K Chaudhary
Journal:  Bioanalysis       Date:  2011-07       Impact factor: 2.681

5.  Validation of a bioanalytical method using capillary microsampling of 8 µl plasma samples: application to a toxicokinetic study in mice.

Authors:  Ove Jonsson; Rodrigo Palma Villar; Lars B Nilsson; Marie Eriksson; Kristian Königsson
Journal:  Bioanalysis       Date:  2012-08       Impact factor: 2.681

6.  A modified serial blood sampling technique and utility of dried-blood spot technique in estimation of blood concentration: application in mouse pharmacokinetics.

Authors:  Vishwanath Kurawattimath; Krishna Pocha; T Thanga Mariappan; Ravi Kumar Trivedi; Sandhya Mandlekar
Journal:  Eur J Drug Metab Pharmacokinet       Date:  2011-09-25       Impact factor: 2.441

7.  Pre-cut dried blood spot (PCDBS): an alternative to dried blood spot (DBS) technique to overcome hematocrit impact.

Authors:  Nikolay Youhnovski; Annik Bergeron; Milton Furtado; Fabio Garofolo
Journal:  Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom       Date:  2011-10-15       Impact factor: 2.419

8.  Discovery pharmacokinetic studies in mice using serial microsampling, dried blood spots and microbore LC-MS/MS.

Authors:  Sadayappan V Rahavendran; Sylvia Vekich; Heather Skor; Minerva Batugo; Leslie Nguyen; Bhasker Shetty; Zhongzhou Shen
Journal:  Bioanalysis       Date:  2012-05       Impact factor: 2.681

9.  Capillary microsampling of 25 µl blood for the determination of toxicokinetic parameters in regulatory studies in animals.

Authors:  Ove Jonsson; Rodrigo Palma Villar; Lars B Nilsson; Carina Norsten-Höög; Jacob Brogren; Marie Eriksson; Kristian Königsson; Anders Samuelsson
Journal:  Bioanalysis       Date:  2012-03       Impact factor: 2.681

10.  Development and validation of a dried blood spot LC-MS/MS assay to quantify ranitidine in paediatric samples.

Authors:  Shirish Yakkundi; Jeff Millership; Paul Collier; Michael D Shields; James McElnay
Journal:  J Pharm Biomed Anal       Date:  2011-08-11       Impact factor: 3.935

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  4 in total

1.  Special issue: global 3Rs efforts - making progress and gaining momentum.

Authors:  Leticia V Medina; Joachim Coenen; Michael D Kastello
Journal:  J Am Assoc Lab Anim Sci       Date:  2015-03       Impact factor: 1.232

Review 2.  Dried matrix spots: an evolving trend in the toxicological field.

Authors:  Ana Laura Bemvenuti Jacques; Maíra Kerpel Santos; Roberta Petry Gorziza; Renata Pereira Limberger
Journal:  Forensic Sci Med Pathol       Date:  2022-02-16       Impact factor: 2.007

3.  Evaluation of Dried Blood Spot Sampling for Clinical Metabolomics: Effects of Different Papers and Sample Storage Stability.

Authors:  Oxana P Trifonova; Dmitri L Maslov; Elena E Balashova; Petr G Lokhov
Journal:  Metabolites       Date:  2019-11-12

4.  Longitudinal monitoring of disease burden and response using ctDNA from dried blood spots in xenograft models.

Authors:  Carolin M Sauer; Katrin Heider; Nitzan Rosenfeld; James D Brenton; Jelena Belic; Samantha E Boyle; James A Hall; Dominique-Laurent Couturier; Angela An; Aadhitthya Vijayaraghavan; Marika Av Reinius; Karen Hosking; Maria Vias
Journal:  EMBO Mol Med       Date:  2022-06-13       Impact factor: 14.260

  4 in total

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