Literature DB >> 31364961

Revealing the Regional Localization and Differential Lung Retention of Inhaled Compounds by Mass Spectrometry Imaging.

Gregory R Hamm1, Erica Bäckström2, Mikael Brülls3, Anna Nilsson4, Nicole Strittmatter1, Per E Andrén4, Ken Grime2, Markus Fridén2,5, Richard J A Goodwin1.   

Abstract

Background: For the treatment of respiratory disease, inhaled drug delivery aims to provide direct access to pharmacological target sites while minimizing systemic exposure. Despite this long-held tenet of inhaled therapeutic advantage, there are limited data of regional drug localization in the lungs after inhalation. The aim of this study was to investigate the distribution and retention of different chemotypes typifying available inhaled drugs [slowly dissolving neutral fluticasone propionate (FP) and soluble bases salmeterol and salbutamol] using mass spectrometry imaging (MSI).
Methods: Salmeterol, salbutamol, and FP were simultaneously delivered by inhaled nebulization to rats. In the same animals, salmeterol-d3, salbutamol-d3, and FP-d3 were delivered by intravenous (IV) injection. Samples of lung tissue were obtained at 2- and 30-minute postdosing, and high-resolution MSI was used to study drug distribution and retention.
Results: IV delivery resulted in homogeneous lung distribution for all molecules. In comparison, while inhalation also gave rise to drug presence in the entire lung, there were regional chemotype-dependent areas of higher abundance. At the 30-minute time point, inhaled salmeterol and salbutamol were preferentially retained in bronchiolar tissue, whereas FP was retained in all regions of the lungs.
Conclusion: This study clearly demonstrates that inhaled small molecule chemotypes are differentially distributed in lung tissue after inhalation, and that high-resolution MSI can be applied to study these retention patterns.

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Keywords:  lung retention; mass spectrometry imaging; pharmacokinetics; pulmonary distribution

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31364961     DOI: 10.1089/jamp.2019.1536

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Aerosol Med Pulm Drug Deliv        ISSN: 1941-2711            Impact factor:   2.849


  1 in total

1.  Towards a Quantitative Mechanistic Understanding of Localized Pulmonary Tissue Retention-A Combined In Vivo/In Silico Approach Based on Four Model Drugs.

Authors:  Anneke Himstedt; Clemens Braun; Sebastian Georg Wicha; Jens Markus Borghardt
Journal:  Pharmaceutics       Date:  2020-04-29       Impact factor: 6.321

  1 in total

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