Journal of Pharmacy and Bioallied Sciences (Jan 2014)

Subcutaneous implants for long-acting drug therapy in laboratory animals may generate unintended drug reservoirs

  • Michael Guarnieri,
  • Betty M Tyler,
  • Louis DeTolla,
  • Ming Zhao,
  • Barry Kobrin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/0975-7406.124315
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 38 – 42

Abstract

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Background: Long-acting therapy in laboratory animals offers advantages over the current practice of 2-3 daily drug injections. Yet little is known about the disintegration of biodegradable drug implants in rodents. Objective: Compare bioavailability of buprenorphine with the biodegradation of lipid-encapsulated subcutaneous drug pellets. Methods: Pharmacokinetic and histopathology studies were conducted in BALB/c female mice implanted with cholesterol-buprenorphine drug pellets. Results: Drug levels are below the level of detection (0.5 ng/mL plasma) within 4-5 days of implant. However, necroscopy revealed that interstitial tissues begin to seal implants within a week. Visual inspection of the implant site revealed no evidence of inflammation or edema associated with the cholesterol-drug residue. Chemical analyses demonstrated that the residues contained 10-13% of the initial opiate dose for at least two weeks post implant. Discussion: The results demonstrate that biodegradable scaffolds can become sequestered in the subcutaneous space. Conclusion: Drug implants can retain significant and unintended reservoirs of drugs.

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