PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

The potential of microdialysis to estimate rifampicin concentrations in the lung of guinea pigs.

  • Faye Lanni,
  • Neil Burton,
  • Debbie Harris,
  • Susan Fotheringham,
  • Simon Clark,
  • Oliver Skinner,
  • Nathan Wiblin,
  • Mike Dennis,
  • Stuart Armstrong,
  • Geraint Davies,
  • Ann Williams

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0245922
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
p. e0245922

Abstract

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Optimised pre-clinical models are required for TB drug development to better predict the pharmacokinetics of anti-tuberculosis (anti-TB) drugs to shorten the time taken for novel drugs and combinations to be approved for clinical trial. Microdialysis can be used to measure unbound drug concentrations in awake freely moving animals in order to describe the pharmacokinetics of drugs in the organs as a continuous sampling technique. The aim of this work was to develop and optimise the microdialysis methodology in guinea pigs to better understand the pharmacokinetics of rifampicin in the lung. In vitro experiments were performed before progressing into in vivo studies because the recovery (concentration of the drug in the tissue fluid related to that in the collected dialysate) of rifampicin was dependent on a variety of experimental conditions. Mass spectrometry of the dialysate was used to determine the impact of flow rate, perfusion fluid and the molecular weight cut-off and membrane length of probes on the recovery of rifampicin at physiologically relevant concentrations. Following determination of probe efficiency and identification of a correlation between rifampicin concentrations in the lung and skeletal muscle, experiments were conducted to measure rifampicin in the sacrospinalis of guinea pigs using microdialysis. Lung concentrations of rifampicin were estimated from the rifampicin concentrations measured in the sacrospinalis. These studies suggest the potential usefulness of the microdialysis methodology to determine drug concentrations of selected anti-TB drugs to support new TB drug development.