Department of Pharmaceutics and Targeted and Long-Acting Drug Combination Anti-Retroviral Therapeutic (TLC-ART) Program, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195.
Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195; Center for AIDS Research, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195.
J Pharm Sci. 2020 May;109(5):1789-1801. doi: 10.1016/j.xphs.2020.01.016. Epub 2020 Jan 29.
TLC-ART101 is a long-acting triple-HIV drug combination of lopinavir-ritonavir-tenofovir in one nanosuspension intended for subcutaneous injection. After a single TLC-ART 101 administration in nonhuman primates, drug concentrations in both plasma and HIV-target lymph node mononuclear cells were sustained for 2 weeks. Nevertheless, the mechanisms leading to the targeted long-acting pharmacokinetics remain elusive. Therefore, an intravenous study of TLC-ART 101 in nonhuman primates was conducted to elucidate the degree of association of drugs in vivo, estimate subcutaneous bioavailability, and refine a mechanism-based pharmacokinetic (MBPK2) model. The MBPK2 model considers TLC-ART 101 systemic drug clearances, nanoparticle-associated/dissociated species, more detailed mechanisms of lymphatic first-pass retention of associated-drugs after subcutaneous administrations, and the prediction of drug concentration time-courses in lymph node mononuclear cells. For all 3 drugs, we found a high association with the nanoparticles in plasma (>87% lopinavir-ritonavir, 97% tenofovir), and an incomplete subcutaneous bioavailability (<29% lopinavir-ritonavir, 85% tenofovir). As hypothesized by the MBPK2 model, the incomplete SC bioavailability observed is due to sequestration into a lymphatic node depot after subcutaneous absorption (unlike most intramuscular nanodrug products having near-to-injection depots), which contributes to long-acting profiles detected in plasma and target cells. This combined experimental and modeling approach may be applicable for the clinical development of other long-acting drug-combination injectables.
TLC-ART101 是一种长效三重复合 HIV 药物,由洛匹那韦-利托那韦-替诺福韦纳米混悬剂组成,用于皮下注射。在非人类灵长类动物单次给予 TLC-ART101 后,血浆和 HIV 靶淋巴结单核细胞中的药物浓度可持续 2 周。然而,导致靶向长效药代动力学的机制仍不清楚。因此,在非人类灵长类动物中进行了 TLC-ART101 的静脉研究,以阐明体内药物的关联程度、估计皮下生物利用度,并完善基于机制的药代动力学(MBPK2)模型。MBPK2 模型考虑了 TLC-ART101 的全身药物清除率、纳米颗粒相关/解离物种、更详细的关联药物皮下给药后经淋巴首过保留的机制,以及淋巴结单核细胞中药物浓度时间过程的预测。对于所有 3 种药物,我们发现它们在血浆中与纳米颗粒高度相关(洛匹那韦-利托那韦>87%,替诺福韦>97%),且皮下生物利用度不完全(洛匹那韦-利托那韦<29%,替诺福韦 85%)。正如 MBPK2 模型所假设的,观察到的不完全 SC 生物利用度是由于皮下吸收后被隔离到淋巴结库中(与大多数肌内纳米药物产品具有接近注射库不同),这有助于在血浆和靶细胞中检测到长效特征。这种结合实验和建模的方法可能适用于其他长效药物组合注射剂的临床开发。