| Literature DB >> 7438330 |
Abstract
Anticipating the renewed clinical trial of the antitumor agent 2-amino-1,3,4-thiadiazole (AT, NSC-4728), we have studied the pharmacologic fate of AT-5-14C in beagle dogs. The drug was only minimally metabolized in 5 h; the radioactivities in the urine, and particularly in the plasma, resided almost entirely in unchanged AT. In four dogs, after IV administration of AT-5-14C at 10 mg/kg (200 mg/m2), 150-200 muCi per animal, the terminal plasma t1/2 of AT was 13 h, and less than 10% of the administered dose appeared in the urine in 5 h. When the dose was raised to 25 mg/kg (500 mg/m2) in four dogs, the average plasma t1/2 of AT was 10 h; the 5-h cumulative excretion of the agent was 9% of the dose in the urine, 0.3% in the bile, and 0.1% as 14CO2 in the expired air. The average total clearance of AT was 0.70 ml/kg/min. Drug concentrations in the cerebrospinal fluid were 95% of those in the plasma at semi-steady state. At autopsy 5 h after dosing, more than 75% of the administered radioactivity was retained in the body, the highest amounts in terms of micrograms per gram of wet tissue being in the liver, kidney, lung and stomach. No appreciable changes in AT pharmacokinetics were evident upon simultaneous IV administration of allopurinol at 30 or 60 mg/kg. AT was less than 7% bound to dog plasma protein at 25 degrees C in concentrations of 12-100 microgram/ml.Entities:
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Year: 1980 PMID: 7438330 DOI: 10.1007/bf00255274
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Chemother Pharmacol ISSN: 0344-5704 Impact factor: 3.333