Department of Pharmaceutics, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, 98195, USA.
Department of Pharmaceutics, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, 98195, USA.
J Pharm Sci. 2022 Feb;111(2):529-541. doi: 10.1016/j.xphs.2021.10.007. Epub 2021 Oct 19.
Drug-combination nanoparticles (DcNP) allow the formulation of multiple HIV drugs in one injectable. In nonhuman primates (NHP), all drugs in DcNP have demonstrated long-acting pharmacokinetics (PK) in the blood and lymph nodes, rendering it suitable for a Targeted Long-acting Antiretroviral Therapy (TLC-ART). To support the translation of TLC-ART into the clinic, the objective is to present a physiologically based PK (PBPK) model tool to control mechanisms affecting the rather complex DcNP-drug PK. Two species contribute simultaneously to the drug PK: drugs that dissociate from DcNP (Part 1) and drugs retained in DcNP (Part 2, presented separately). Here, we describe the PBPK modeling of the nanoparticle-free drugs. The free-drug model was built on subcutaneous injections of suspended lopinavir, ritonavir, and tenofovir in NHP, and validated by external experiments. A novelty was the design of a lymphatic network as part of a whole-body PBPK system which included major lymphatic regions: the cervical, axillary, hilar, mesenteric, and inguinal nodes. This detailed/regionalized description of the lymphatic system and mononuclear cells represents an unprecedented level of prediction that renders the free-drug model extendible to other small-drug molecules targeting the lymphatic system at both the regional and cellular levels.
药物联合纳米颗粒(DcNP)可将多种 HIV 药物制成一种可注射制剂。在非人灵长类动物(NHP)中,DcNP 中的所有药物在血液和淋巴结中均表现出长效药代动力学(PK)特性,使其适合作为靶向长效抗逆转录病毒疗法(TLC-ART)。为了将 TLC-ART 转化为临床应用,本研究旨在介绍一种基于生理学的 PK(PBPK)模型工具,以控制影响相当复杂的 DcNP-药物 PK 的机制。两种物质同时影响药物 PK:从 DcNP 中解离的药物(第 1 部分)和保留在 DcNP 中的药物(第 2 部分,单独介绍)。在这里,我们描述了无纳米颗粒药物的 PBPK 建模。游离药物模型是基于 NHP 中悬浮洛匹那韦、利托那韦和替诺福韦的皮下注射构建的,并通过外部实验进行了验证。一个新颖之处是设计了一个淋巴管网络,作为全身 PBPK 系统的一部分,该系统包括主要的淋巴区域:颈部、腋窝、肺门、肠系膜和腹股沟淋巴结。这种对淋巴管系统和单核细胞的详细/区域化描述代表了前所未有的预测水平,使游离药物模型可扩展到其他针对淋巴管系统的小分子药物,无论是在区域还是细胞水平上。