Characterisation and semi-mechanistic modelling of eflornithine pharmacokinetics and evalutation of prodrugs in oral treatment against late-stage human African trypanosomiasis
Abstract
The present thesis explores the hypothesis that treatment of human African trypanosomiasis can be improved by characterising the enantioselective pharmacokinetics of eflornithine, and investigating the oral eflornithine absorption. Eflornithine pharmacokinetics after oral single dose or intravenous administration in the rat was well described by a three-compartment model with saturable distribution to one peripheral, binding, compartment. Enantiospecific oral bioavailability was estimated at 32 and 59% for L- and D-eflornithine, respectively. Although eflornithine enantiomers display similar rates of absorption their extents of absorption differed. This may be caused by a chemical complex in the gut rendering less L-eflornithine available for absorption. In an attempt to improve oral bioavailability, prodrug candidates were synthesised and administered orally to the rat. The candidates were found to be metabolically too stable and did not deliver eflornithine in vivo. Furthermore, in vitro permeability, potency and metabolic stability for the prodrugs were investigated. The pharmacodynamics in man was mathematically modelled in a time-to-event approach and three different eflornithine based treatments were compared. The three-fold difference in potency between oral and intravenous eflornithine monotherapy may suggest that it is mainly the L-eflornithine enantiomer that elicits the anti-trypanosomal effect, since the oral bioavailability for the L-enantiomer is reported to be about 30% in vivo. Further investigation into the separate eflornithine enantiomers is motivated since the potency differs and combination with nifurtimox further improves efficacy which could enable an oral eflornithine based dosage regimen.
Parts of work
I. Cloete TT, Johansson CC, N'Da DD, Vodnala SK, Rottenberg ME, Breytenbach JC, Ashton M. Mono-, di- and trisubstituted derivatives of eflornithine: synthesis for in vivo delivery of DL-alpha-difluoromethylornithine in plasma. Arzneimittelforschung. 2011;61(5):317-25. ::doi::10.1055/s-0031-1296205 II. Johansson CC, Cloete TT, N’Da DD, Breytenbach JC, Svensson R, Jansson-Löfmark R, Ashton M. In vitro and In vivo Pharmacokinetic Evaluation of Eflornithine Based Prodrugs for Oral Treatment of Human African Trypanosomiasis. (Submitted) III. Johansson CC, Gennemark P, Artursson P, Äbelö A, Ashton M, Jansson-Löfmark R. Population pharmacokinetic modeling and deconvolution of enantioselective absorption of eflornithine in the rat. Journal of pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics 2013;40(1):117–128 ::doi::10.1007/s10928-012-9293-x IV. Johansson CC, Ashton M, Jansson-Löfmark R, Äbelö A. Eflornithine elicits stereoselective extent of absorption: simultaneous population modeling of IV and oral pharmacokinetics in the rat and permeability in a modified Ussing chamber. (Submitted) V. Johansson CC, Äbelö A, Jansson-Löfmark R, A retrospective time-to-event analysis of three eflornithine based treatments to evaluate effectiveness of oral eflornithine for treatment of late-stage T.b. gambiense infection. (In manuscript)
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (Medicine)
University
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology. Department of Pharmacology
Disputation
Fredagen den 14 juni 2013, kl 9.00, Ivan Östholm, Medicinaregatan 13, Göteborg
Date of defence
2013-06-14
c-c.johansson@telia.com
carl.johansson@pharm.gu.se
Date
2013-05-22Author
Johansson, Carl
Keywords
Eflornithine
enantioselective
absorption
pharmacokinetics
prodrug
time-to-event
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-628-8625-7
Language
eng