4.0 Article

Neurotoxicity and toxicokinetics of artelinic acid following repeated oral administration in rats

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TOXICOLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 5, Pages 401-410

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/10915810701582913

Keywords

artelinic acid; exposure time; neurotoxicity; oral regimen; rats; toxicokinetics

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Neurotoxicity secondary to oil-soluble artemisinins has been reported in various animal species. The onset of neurotoxicity and toxicokinetics of oral artelinic acid (AL), a water-soluble artemisinin, were investigated. After dose range study, rats were dosed at either 160 mg/kg daily for 9 consecutive days or at 288 mg/kg once every other day for five doses, so that the total dose (1440 mg/kg) and duration (9 days) were identical. Neuronal damage of varying severity was identified beginning as early as 1 day after completing dosing and continued for up to 10 days post dosing. Neuronal injury was most severe 7 days after the last treatment in each of the two dosing regimens. The rats dosed with 160 mg/kg of AL daily showed moderate neurotoxicity and lost 22% of their body weight during treatment. Compared with the first dose, the toxicokinetic profile of this regimen changed significantly, with the elimination half-life increasing 3.82-fold and the volume of distribution increasing 5.23-fold on the last day of dosing. In the animals treated with AL at 288 mg/kg every other day for 5 doses, minimal neuronal degeneration (severity score 1.17) was identified and the body weight was only 8% loss. Furthermore, there were no obvious differences in the pharmacokinetic parameters between first and last dosing days with this regimen. Additionally, a progressively drug retention in stomach and drug accretion in blood were only found in rats treated with 160 mg/kg daily for 9 days. These results imply that delayed gastric emptying resulted in AL accumulation in blood and prolonged a neurotoxic exposure time (186 h) in 160 mg/kg rats when compared to that (75 h) in 288 mg/kg animals. Therefore, the drug exposure time is a key factor in the neurotoxicity induced by AL.

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