| Literature DB >> 31152772 |
Alice Hagan1, Marcus Caine2, Cara Press2, Wendy M Macfarlane3, Gary Phillips3, Andrew W Lloyd3, Peter Czuczman2, Hugh Kilpatrick2, Zainab Bascal2, Yiqing Tang2, Pedro Garcia2, Andrew L Lewis4.
Abstract
Drug-eluting Embolic Bead - Transarterial Chemoembolisation (DEB-TACE) is a minimally invasive embolising treatment for liver tumours that allows local release of chemotherapeutic drugs via ion exchange, following delivery into hepatic arterial vasculature. Thus far, no single in vitro model has been able to accurately predict the complete kinetics of drug release from DEB, due to heterogeneity of rate-controlling mechanisms throughout the process of DEB delivery. In this study, we describe two in vitro models capable of distinguishing between early phase and late phase drug release by mimicking in vivo features of each phase. First, a vascular flow system (VFS) was used to simulate the early phase by delivering DEB into a silicon vascular cast under high pulsatile flow. This yielded a burst release profile of drugs from DEB which related to the dose adjusted Cmax observed in pharmacokinetic plasma profiles from a preclinical swine model. Second, an open loop flow-through cell system was used to model late phase drug release by packing beads in a column with an ultra-low flow rate. DEB loaded with doxorubicin, irinotecan and vandetanib showed differential drug release rates due to their varying chemical properties and unique drug-bead interactions. Using more representative in vitro models to map discrete phases of DEB drug release will provide a better capability to predict the pharmacokinetics of developmental formulations, which has implications for treatment safety and efficacy.Entities:
Keywords: Chemoembolisation; Drug delivery; Drug-eluting beads; IVIVC; Vandetanib
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31152772 DOI: 10.1016/j.ejps.2019.05.021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pharm Sci ISSN: 0928-0987 Impact factor: 4.384