4.8 Article

Subcutaneous delivery of a dendrimer-BH3 mimetic improves lymphatic uptake and survival in lymphoma

期刊

JOURNAL OF CONTROLLED RELEASE
卷 348, 期 -, 页码 420-430

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2022.05.041

关键词

Lymphoma; BH3 mimetic; Dendrimer; Nanomedicine; Lymphatics; Drug delivery

资金

  1. Monash University
  2. Starpharma
  3. Astra Zeneca

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study investigates the impact of subcutaneous dosing on lymphatic exposure, pharmacokinetics, and efficacy of AZD0466. The results show that subcutaneous dosing leads to longer half-life, higher lymphatic transport rate, and improved tolerance. Additionally, higher doses of subcutaneous administration result in improved efficacy.
As a malignant tumour of lymphatic origin, B-cell lymphoma represents a significant challenge for drug delivery, where effective therapies must access malignant cells in the blood, organs and lymphatics while avoiding offtarget toxicity. Subcutaneous (SC) administration of nanomedicines allows preferential access to both the lymphatic and blood systems and may therefore provide a route to enhanced drug exposure to lymphomas. Here we examine the impact of SC dosing on lymphatic exposure, pharmacokinetics (PK), and efficacy of AZD0466, a small molecule dual Bcl-2/Bcl-xL inhibitor conjugated to a 'DEP (R)' G5 poly-L-lysine dendrimer. PK studies reveal that the plasma half-life of the dendrimer-drug conjugate is 8-times longer than that of drug alone, providing evidence of slow release from the circulating dendrimer nanocarrier. The SC dosed construct also shows preferential lymphatic transport, with over 50% of the bioavailable dose recovered in thoracic lymph. Increases in dose (up to 400 mg/kg) are well tolerated after SC administration and studies in a model of disseminated lymphoma in mice show that high dose SC treatment outperforms IV administration using doses that lead to similar total plasma exposure (lower peak concentrations but extended exposure after SC). These data show that the DEP (R) dendrimer can act as a circulating drug depot accessing both the lymphatic and blood circulatory systems. SC administration improves lymphatic exposure and facilitates higher dose administration due to improved tolerability. Higher dose SC administration also results in improved efficacy, suggesting that drug delivery systems that access both plasma and lymph hold significant potential for the treatment of haematological cancers where lymphatic and extranodal dissemination are poor prognostic factors.

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