| Literature DB >> 35426570 |
Andreas K O Åslund1, Rob J Vandebriel2, Fanny Caputo3, Wim H de Jong2, Christiaan Delmaar2, Astrid Hyldbakk1,4, Emilie Rustique3, Ruth Schmid1, Sofie Snipstad1,4,5, Isabelle Texier3, Kai Vernstad1, Sven Even F Borgos6.
Abstract
Biodistribution of nanoencapsulated bioactive compounds is primarily determined by the size, shape, chemical composition and surface properties of the encapsulating nanoparticle, and, thus, less dependent on the physicochemical properties of the active pharmaceutical ingredient encapsulated. In the current work, we aimed to investigate the impact of formulation type on biodistribution profile for two clinically relevant nanoformulations. We performed a comparative study of biodistribution in healthy rats at several dose levels and durations up to 14-day post-injection. The studied nanoformulations were nanostructured lipid carriers incorporating the fluorescent dye IR780-oleyl, and polymeric nanoparticles containing the anticancer agent cabazitaxel. The biodistribution was approximated by quantification of the cargo in blood and relevant organs. Several clear and systematic differences in biodistribution were observed, with the most pronounced being a much higher (more than 50-fold) measured concentration ratio between cabazitaxel in all organs vs. blood, as compared to IR780-oleyl. Normalized dose linearity largely showed opposite trends between the two compounds after injection. Cabazitaxel showed a higher brain accumulation than IR780-oleyl with increasing dose injected. Interestingly, cabazitaxel showed a notable and prolonged accumulation in lung tissue compared to other organs. The latter observations could warrant further studies towards a possible therapeutic indication within lung and conceivably brain cancer for nanoformulations of this highly antineoplastic compound, for which off-target toxicity is currently dose-limiting in the clinic.Entities:
Keywords: ADME; Biodistribution; Nanobiomaterial; Nanomedicine; Nanostructured lipid carrier; Poly(alkyl cyanoacrylate)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35426570 PMCID: PMC9012159 DOI: 10.1007/s13346-022-01157-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Deliv Transl Res ISSN: 2190-393X Impact factor: 5.671
NP dose injected in the different groups and different NPs
| Low dose | Medium dose | High dose | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NP (mg/kg) | Load1 (mg/kg) | NP (mg/kg) | Load (mg/kg) | NP (mg/kg) | Load (mg/kg) | |
| LipImage | 21.3 | 0,051 | 64 | 0.15 | 192 | 0.46 |
| PEBCA | 4.4 | 0.5 | - | - | 30.4 | 3.5 |
1Load is either Cbz or IR780-Oleyl
Detailed information on sampling points and number of animals in the PEBCA experiment
| 1 h | 1 h | 4 | 4 |
| 1 day | 3 min, 4 h, 1 day | 4 | 4 |
| 2 days | 7 min, 2 days | 4 | 4 |
| 4 days | 1 min, 15 min, 4 days | 4 | 4 |
| 14 days | 30 min, 14 days | 4 | 4 |
Procedure for homogenization
| Brain | 2 | 2 |
| Heart | Gradual increase up to 6 | 4 |
| Kidney | 6 | 2 |
| Testicles | 9 | 2 |
| Spleen | 9 | 2 |
| Thymus | 9 | 2 |
| Lung | 9 | 4 |
| Liver | 9 | 2 |
Fig. 1Measured concentrations of Cbz (from PEBCA) and IR780-oleyl (from LipImage) in serum (ng/mL) over the experiment duration, for all doses injected. Note that both axes are logarithmic. Each data point is the average of n = 4 animals
Fig. 2Area under the curve (AUC, in ng/g tissue or ng/mL serum * hour) for all organs and serum, all dose regimes. AUC is calculated for Cbz in PEBCA-injected animals and for IR780-oleyl in LipImage-injected animals. AUC is shown as an accumulation over time from the first sampling time (‘initial’; 1 h for organs, 1 min for serum in PEBCA injections, 15 min for serum in LipImage injections). Testes and thymus were not collected for PEBCA injections. Each data point shows the average and standard deviation of n = 4 animals
Maximal concentrations (Cmax) measured in tissues (ng/g) and serum (ng/mL), and sampling time (hours, minutes) at which this concentration was measured (Tmax). Concentrations are measured for Cbz after PEBCA injections and for IR780-oleyl after LipImage injections. Asterisk (*) indicates first that the sampling time is the first in the sampling series. Each data point shows the average of n = 4 animals
| 2.89 | 24 | 868 | 1* | 1424 | 1* | 205 | 1* | 2235 | 1* | 2072 | 1* | 2198 | 1* | |
| 22.4 | 24 | 1569 | 1* | 1766 | 1* | 912 | 1* | 7593 | 1* | 7083 | 1* | 23,290 | 1* | |
| 2.08 | 1* | 28.6 | 1* | 24.2 | 1* | 109 | 24 | 68.8 | 1* | 33.1 | 48 | 1121 | 15* | |
| 3.24 | 1* | 84.4 | 1* | 70.4 | 1* | 285 | 24 | 188 | 1* | 153 | 96 | 3007 | 15* | |
| 10.6 | 1* | 178 | 1* | 110 | 1* | 945 | 24 | 515 | 1* | 432 | 1* | 6183 | 30 | |
Fig. 3Ratios of measured concentrations (Cbz, IR780-oleyl) (ng/g) in tissue relative to serum at all sampling times and doses. Y axis (scale) for Cbz on the left side; for IR780-oleyl on the right side of each graph. Each data point shows the average and standard deviation of n = 4 animals
Fig. 4Ratios between analyte concentrations (Cbz after PEBCA injection; IR780-oleyl after LipImage injections) measured in tissues and serum after different injected doses (high/low for PEBCA; high/medium/low for LipImage), at all sampling times. Ratios (logarithmic scale) are normalized to the difference in injected doses, i.e. a ratio = 1 represents perfect linearity in measured vs. injected dose. Note that both axes for the serum data are logarithmic. Each data point shows the average of n = 4 animals
Fig. 5Measured concentrations of the Cbz metabolites 10-methyl-docetaxel (10-m-Doc) and docetaxel (Doc) over all sampling times, after administration of the PEBCA formulation. The graphs include overlay of absolute concentrations (ng/g tissue) given as bars and with y axis on the left side, and as concentrations (%) relative to Cbz in the same samples with y axis on the right side. Each data point shows the average of n = 4 animals