4.5 Article

Cost-Effective Pharmaceutical Implants in Fish: Validating the Performance of Slow-Release Implants for the Antidepressant Fluoxetine

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY
Volume 42, Issue 6, Pages 1326-1336

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/etc.5613

Keywords

Prozac; Antidepressant; Selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitor (SSRI); Internal exposure; Method; Fish

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Internal, slow-release implants are a useful method for delivering long-term exposure to pharmaceutical pollutants. In this study, we tested and validated a slow-release implant method using two lipid-based carriers in fish. The carriers released the pollutant, fluoxetine, in different manners, and the highest concentration was found in the brain tissue. By comparing the implants with waterborne exposures, we demonstrated the effectiveness of internal exposures in assessing the impacts of pharmaceutical pollutants in natural environments.
Internal, slow-release implants can be an effective way to manipulate animal physiology or deliver a chemical exposure over long periods of time without the need for an exogenous exposure route. Slow-release implants involve dissolving a compound in a lipid-based carrier, which is inserted into the body of an organism. However, the release kinetics of the compound from the implant to body tissues also requires careful validation. We tested and validated a slow-release implant methodology for exposing fish to a pharmaceutical pollutant, fluoxetine. We tested two lipid-based carriers (coconut oil or vegetable shortening) in the common roach (Rutilus rutilus). The implants contained either a high (50 mu g/g), low (25 mu g/g), or control (0 mu g/g) concentration of fluoxetine, and we measured tissue uptake in the brain, muscle, and plasma of implanted fish over 25 days. The two carriers released fluoxetine differently over time: coconut oil released fluoxetine in an accelerating manner (tissue uptake displayed a positive quadratic curvature), whereas vegetable shortening released fluoxetine in a decelerating manner (a negative quadratic curvature). For both carrier types, fluoxetine was measured at the highest concentration in the brain, followed by muscle and plasma. By comparing the implant exposures with waterborne exposures in the published literature, we showed that the implants delivered an internal exposure that would be similar if fish were exposed in surface waters containing effluents. Overall, we showed that slow-release internal implants are an effective method for delivering chronic exposures of fluoxetine over at least 1-month time scales. Internal exposures can be an especially powerful experimental tool when coupled with field-based study designs to assess the impacts of pharmaceutical pollutants in complex natural environments. Environ Toxicol Chem 2023;00:1-10. (c) 2023 The Authors. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of SETAC.

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