4.7 Article

Ocular metabolism and distribution of drugs in the rabbit eye: Quantitative assessment after intracameral and intravitreal administrations

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 613, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2021.121361

Keywords

Ocular tissues; Acetaminophen; Brimonidine; Cefuroxime; Sunitinib; Sulfotransferase; Aldehyde oxidase; Esterase; CYP3A; Rabbit; Metabolism; Ocular pharmacokinetics

Funding

  1. EU-ITN project OCUTHER (H2020-MSCA-ITN-2016) [722717]
  2. University of Eastern Finland
  3. Doctoral Programme in Drug Research (University of Eastern Finland)

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The study investigated the pharmacokinetics of four drugs in albino rabbit eyes, revealing that metabolite levels were lower than parent drugs, with cefuroxime axetil being an exception. Enzyme activity in the eye was low, suggesting that metabolism may not play a major role in ocular pharmacokinetics.
Quantitation of ocular drug metabolism is important, but only sparse data is currently available. Herein, the pharmacokinetics of four drugs, substrates of metabolizing enzymes, was investigated in albino rabbit eyes after intracameral and intravitreal administrations. Acetaminophen, brimonidine, cefuroxime axetil, and sunitinib and their corresponding metabolites were quantitated in the cornea, iris-ciliary body, aqueous humor, lens, vitreous humor, and neural retina with LC-MS/MS analytics. Non-compartmental analysis was employed to estimate the pharmacokinetic parameters of the parent drugs and metabolites. The area under the curve (AUC) values of metabolites were 12-70 times lower than the AUC values of the parent drugs in the tissues with the highest enzymatic activity. The ester prodrug cefuroxime axetil was an exception because it was efficiently and quantitatively converted to cefuroxime in the ocular tissues. In contrast to the liver, sulfotransferases, aldehyde oxidase, and cytochrome P450 3A activities were low in the eye and they had negligible impact on ocular drug clearance. With the exception of esterase substrates, metabolism seems to be a minor player in ocular pharmacokinetics. However, metabolites might contribute to ocular toxicity, and drug metabolism in various eye tissues should be investigated and understood thoroughly.

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