| Literature DB >> 27539717 |
Manfred Bodenlenz1, Katrin I Tiffner1, Reingard Raml1, Thomas Augustin1, Christian Dragatin1, Thomas Birngruber1, Denise Schimek1, Gerd Schwagerle2, Thomas R Pieber1,2, Sam G Raney3, Isadore Kanfer4,5, Frank Sinner6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The availability of generic topical dermatological drug products is constrained by the limited methods established to assess topical bioequivalence (BE). A novel cutaneous pharmacokinetic approach, dermal open-flow microperfusion (dOFM), can continuously assess the rate and extent to which a topical drug becomes available in the dermis, to compare in vivo dermal bioavailability (BA) and support BE evaluations for topical products.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27539717 PMCID: PMC5222896 DOI: 10.1007/s40262-016-0442-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Pharmacokinet ISSN: 0312-5963 Impact factor: 6.447
Fig. 1Schematic of dermal open flow microperfusion
Fig. 2Scheme (a) and photograph (b) of the duplicate test triad for comparative bioavailability assessment. Two treatment sites per test triad were dosed with the reference product (R 1: central, R 2: non-central) and one treatment site was dosed with the test product (T)
Fig. 3Dermal open flow microperfusion (dOFM) acyclovir concentration profiles for the test product (T) site and the two reference (R 1 and R 2) sites (mean ± standard error of the mean, n = 40 test triads in 20 subjects). Acyclovir was analyzed from one pre-dose sample (spanning −1 to 0 h) and nine pooled post-dose samples (spanning 0–4, 4–8 … 32–36 h). The post-dose concentrations are plotted at the mid-point of the time intervals (2, 6 … 34 h)
Statistical evaluation comparing PK endpoints using typical BE criteria (n = 40 test triads in 20 subjects)
| Comparison | PK endpoint | 90 % confidence interval |
| Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| AUC0–36 h | 0.86–1.18 | 1.01 | Positive BE result Confirmed |
|
| 0.86–1.21 | 1.02 | ||
|
| AUC0–36 h | 0.69–1.05 | 0.85 | Negative BE result Confirmed |
|
| 0.61–1.02 | 0.79 |
AUC area under the curve, BE bioequivalence, C maximum plasma concentration, PK pharmacokinetic, R reference, T test product
Pharmacokinetic endpoints AUC0–36 h and C max
| Product | AUC0–36 h (ng h/mL) |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean ± SEMa | Geometric mean ± SEMb | Mean ± SEM | Geometric mean ± SEM | |
|
| 26.75 ± 3.85 | 16.23 ± 1.19 | 1.32 ± 0.18 | 0.85 ± 1.18 |
|
| 26.32 ± 4.07 | 16.34 ± 1.18 | 1.29 ± 0.17 | 0.86 ± 1.17 |
|
| 25.38 ± 4.52 | 13.84 ± 1.20 | 1.12 ± 0.19 | 0.67 ± 1.19 |
AUC area under the curve, C maximum plasma concentration, R reference SEM standard error of the mean, T test product
aMean refers to the arithmetic mean and corresponds to the arithmetic mean profiles in Fig. 2
bGeometric mean refers to the geometric mean that was used in the statistical evaluation reported in Table 1
| This is the first study showing the utility of clinical dermal open-flow microperfusion (dOFM) as a dermal pharmacokinetic approach to compare dermal bioavailability (BA) and support bioequivalence (BE) evaluations for a topical (locally acting) drug product. |
| dOFM is capable of directly measuring the penetration of topically applied acyclovir in human subjects in vivo with low variability for prolonged durations. |
| dOFM has the necessary accuracy and reproducibility to confirm BE for a reference acyclovir cream 5 % compared with itself, and is sufficiently sensitive to discriminate inequivalent BA between two different topical acyclovir cream 5 % products, in both cases based upon conventional BE criteria and pharmacokinetic endpoints. |