| Literature DB >> 33809774 |
Kevin Hart1, Martyn Harvey2, Mingtan Tang3, Zimei Wu3, Grant Cave1.
Abstract
In recent years, a number of groups have been investigating the use of "empty" liposomes with no drug loaded as scavengers both for exogenous intoxicants and endogenous toxic molecules. Preclinical trials have demonstrated that repurposing liposomes to sequester such compounds may prove clinically useful. The use of such "empty" liposomes in the dialysate during dialysis avoids recognition by complement surveillance, allowing high doses of liposomes to be used. The "reach" of dialysis may also be increased to molecules that are not traditionally dialysable. We aim to review the current literature in this area with the aims of increasing awareness and informing further research. A structured literature search identified thirteen papers which met the inclusion criteria. Augmenting the extraction of ammonia in hepatic failure with pH-gradient liposomes with acidic centres in peritoneal dialysis is the most studied area, with work progressing toward phase one trials. Liposomes used to augment the removal of exogenous intoxicants and protein-bound uraemic and hepatic toxins that accumulate in these organ failures and liposome-supported enzymatic dialysis have also been studied. It is conceivable that liposomes will be repurposed from the role of pharmaceutical vectors to gain further indications as clinically useful nanomedical antidotes/treatments within the next decade.Entities:
Keywords: ammonia; dialysis; intoxication; liposome
Year: 2021 PMID: 33809774 PMCID: PMC8002345 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13030395
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1PRISMA diagram of studies included in this review.
Summary of studies included in the review.
| Authors | Experimental Model | Target Molecule | Liposome Type | Results: In Vitro | Results: In Vivo |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exogenous toxic substances | |||||
| Forster et al. (2014) | pH-gradient liposomes in vitro and LSPD in vivo (rat model) | Verapamil, Propranolol, Amitriptyline, Phenobarbital | Liposome with acidic core (except phenobarbital where core basic) | 90% of verapamil was sequestered in Liposomes within 8 h in presence of plasma proteins | Verapamil: >80-fold increased extraction of drug over a 12-h peritoneal dwell time versus conventional icodextrin dialysate control. † |
| Chapman et al. (2019) | LSPD in vivo | Amitriptyline | Liposomes with acidic core | Nil | 12-fold increase in dialysate amitriptyline concentration with LSPD. † |
| Cave et al. (2018) | LSPD in vivo ± IV DOPG liposomes (rat models) | Amitriptyline | Liposomes with acidic core for liposomes in peritoneal dialysate | Nil | DOPG liposomes increased blood amitriptyline concentrations by 50%. |
| Enzymatic liposome dialysis | |||||
| Pratsinis et al. (2017) | LSPD in vivo (rat models) | Ethanol | Enzyme-loaded Liposomes (containing ethanol metabolising enzymes) compared with free enzymes in dialysate | Nil | E-liposomes enhanced ethanol metabolism, as evidenced by increased ethanol metabolites in both plasma and dialysate. |
| Endogenous toxic substances | |||||
| Forster et al. (2014) | LSPD both in vitro and in vivo (rat model) | Ammonia | Liposomes with acidic core | Liposomes extracted 95% of ammonia added to an in vitro diffusion system in 8 hr. When serum was added to mimic physiological conditions, the uptake into liposomes exceeded the total ammonia added. | 20-fold increase in ammonia concentration in dialysate with a 3-hr. LSPD treatment in rats. † |
| Agostoni et al. (2016) | In vitro: study on effect of concentration of citrate in liposome on ammonia removal capacity. | Ammonia | Liposomes with acidic core | Acidic core of liposome confirmed as an influx driver of ammonia to liposomes, proportional to concentration of citrate in liposome. | One week of LSPD in rat models of induced hepatic failure: 10-fold increase in dialysate ammonia, reduced plasma ammonia concentration and brain water concentration versus conventional peritoneal dialysis. † |
| Giacalone et al. (2018) | In vitro: capacity of liposomes for ammonia uptake and drug interactions in human ascitic fluid was assessed; | Ammonia | Liposomes with acidic core | LSPD maintained its ammonia uptake when combined with ascitic fluid from liver disease patients, with limited interaction effects when combined with drugs commonly co-administered to this patient group, except the lipophilic weakly basic propranolol and fluoroquinolones | LSPD did not remove important metabolites more than conventional PD fluid |
| Matoori et al. (2020) | LSPD in vivo (minipig models) | Ammonia | Liposomes with acidic core | Nil | Increased dialytic clearance of ammonia in ammonium chloride infusion with LSPD. † |
| Endogenous bound solutes | |||||
| Shi et al. (2019) | Liposomes both in vitro and an in vivo rat peritoneal dialysis model | p-cresyl sulphate (PCS), indoxyl sulphate (IS) and indole-3-acetic acid (3-IAA) | Soy phospholipid liposomes | Adding liposomes or albumin to dialysate markedly increased removal of PCS and IS. Albumin Markedly increased removal of 3-IAA. | Both LSPD and albumin resulted in higher concentrations of intraperitoneal PBUTs. † |
| Shi et al. (2019) | Liposome-supported HD both in vitro and in vivo (rat models) | PCS, IS and Hippuric acid (HA) | Soy phospholipid liposomes | Percentage removal of both PCS and IS, but not HA, increased as the liposome dose increased in a dose-response relationship. Adding liposomes to dialysate markedly increased removal of PBUTs without significantly altering urea and creatinine clearance | Adding liposomes resulted in higher reduction ratios and more total solute removal for several PBUTs when compared to conventional dialysate. † |
| Shen et al. (2020) | In vitro—rapid equilibrium dialysis (RED) device. | PCS and IS | Cationic liposomes (modified) vs. SP liposomes | Cationic showed higher binding rate with IS (1.24–1.38 fold higher) and PCS (1.07–1.09 fold higher) compared with plain liposomes. | Nil |
| Shen et al. (2020) | Liposome-supported haemodialysis both in vitro and in vivo (rat model) | Unconjugated bilirubin and bile salts | Soy phospholipid liposomes | Unconjugated bilirubin (52.83%–99.87%) and bile salts (50.54%–94.75%) were bound by liposomes in a dose–response relationship. Concentrations of both were significantly decreased in the liposome dialysis group vs. phosphate buffered saline group. | Liposome-containing dialysate resulted in a significantly higher reduction ratio in total bilirubin (6.56% ± 5.72% vs. −1.86% ± 5.99%, |
| Shen et al. (2020) | In vitro dialysis (Ultrafiltration column) | representative PBUTs and liver failure-related solutes | Linoleic acid-modified liposomes (LA-liposomes) | LA-liposomes exhibited binding to PBUTs, bilirubin and bile acids. | Nil |
Table abbreviations: CARPA—complement activation-related pseudoallergy; DOPG—1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoglycerol; DPPC—dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine; HA—hippuric acid; ILE—intravenous lipid emulsion; IS—indoxyl sulphate; IV intravenous; LA—linoleic acid; LSPD—liposome-supported peritoneal dialysis; PBUT—protein-bound uraemic toxin; PCS—p-cresyl sulphate; SP—soy phospholipid. † indicates a positive in vitro finding which translated into a positive in vivo finding.