4.0 Article

Perspectives on Lung Dose and Inhaled Biomolecules

Journal

TOXICOLOGIC PATHOLOGY
Volume 49, Issue 2, Pages 378-385

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0192623320946297

Keywords

lung deposition; biotherapeutics; inhalation toxicology; pulmonary dosimetry; monoclonal antibodies; peptides

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Dose plays a crucial role in studies of inhaled agents, impacting the understanding of dose delivery to humans and animals, as well as safety implications. Inhalation exposure makes it challenging to determine total delivered dose, with the focus generally on deposition in the alveolar region for biologics.
Dose is highly important to studies of inhaled agents because there must be an understanding of the dose delivered to humans, the dose delivered to animals in toxicology studies, and an ability to interpret and compare both sets of information relative to safety. Unlike oral or intravenous administrations, total delivered or inhaled dose is not easy to determine following inhalation exposure and is also not necessarily the most important determinant of toxicity. A review of dose distribution throughout the respiratory tract as well as total inhaled dose is provided. The implications of regional deposition for biologics are reviewed and specific examples over a range of different molecular weights are provided. Biologics are generally large enough that absorption from ciliated epithelia is low. Thus, deposition of biologics in head airways and tracheobronchial regions is unlikely to be of high importance unless there are interactions with specific receptors at these sites. Therefore, it is the dose of proteins or biologics deposited in the alveolar region that are generally of most interest.

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