Intravitreal Pharmacokinetics in Mice: SPECT/CT Imaging and Scaling to Rabbits and Humans




Schmitt M, Hippeläinen E, Ravina M, Arango-Gonzalez B, Antopolsky M, Vellonen KS, Airaksinen AJ, Urtti A

PublisherAMER CHEMICAL SOC

2019

Molecular Pharmaceutics

MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS

MOL PHARMACEUT

16

10

4399

4404

6

1543-8384

1543-8392

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.9b00679



Preclinical in vivo tests of retinal drug responses are carried out in mice and rats, often after intravitreal injections. However, quantitative pharmacokinetics in the mouse eye is poorly understood. Ocular pharmacokinetics studies are usually done in rabbits. We investigated elimination of three compounds ([Tc-99m]Tc-pentetate, [In-111]In-pentetreotide, [Tc-99m]Tc-human serum albumin with molecular weights of 510.2 Da, 1506.4 Da, and 66.5 kDa, respectively) from mouse vitreous using imaging with single photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography (SPECT/CT). Increasing molecular weight decreased elimination of the compounds from the mouse eyes. Half-lives of [Tc-99m]Tc-pentetate, [In-111]In-pentetreotide, and [Tc-99m]Tc-human serum albumin in the mouse eyes were 1.8 +/- 0.5 h, 4.3 +/- 1.7 h, and 30.0 +/- 9.0 h, respectively. These values are 3-12-fold shorter than half-lives of similar compounds in the rabbit vitreous. Dose scaling factors were calculated for mouse-to-rabbit and mouse-to-man translation. They were 27-90 and 38-126, respectively, for intravitreal injections in rabbit and man. We show ocular pharmacokinetic parameters for mice and interspecies scaling factors that may augment ocular drug discovery and development.



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