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A novel approach for the intravenous delivery of leuprolide using core-cross-linked polymeric micelles

Authors :
Hu, Qizhi
Van Gaal, Ethlinn V B
Brundel, Paul
Ippel, Hans
Hackeng, Tilman
Rijcken, Cristianne J F
Storm, Gert
Hennink, Wim E.
Prakash, Jai
Sub Drug delivery
UIPS - Utrecht Institute for Pharmaceutical Sciences
Sub General Pharmaceutics
Biochemie
RS: CARIM - R1 - Thrombosis and haemostasis
RS: CARIM - R3 - Vascular biology
Sub Drug delivery
UIPS - Utrecht Institute for Pharmaceutical Sciences
Sub General Pharmaceutics
Biomaterials Science and Technology
Source :
Journal of Controlled Release, 205, 98-108. Elsevier / Bunge, Journal of Controlled Release, 205, 98. Elsevier, Journal of controlled release, 205, 98-108. Elsevier
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2015.

Abstract

Therapeutic peptides are highly attractive drugs for the treatment of various diseases. However, their poor pharmacokinetics due to rapid renal elimination limits their clinical applications. In this study, a model hormone peptide, leuprolide, was covalently linked to core-cross-linked polymeric micelles (CCL-PMs) via two different hydrolysable ester linkages, thereby yielding a nanoparticulate system with tuneable drug release kinetics. The ester linkage that provided the slowest peptide release kinetics was selected for in vivo evaluation. Compared to the soluble peptide, the leuprolide-entrapped CCL-PMs showed a prolonged circulation half-life (14.4 h) following a single intravenous injection in healthy rats and the released leuprolide was detected in blood for 3 days. In addition, the area under the plasma concentration-time curve (AUC) value was >100-fold higher for leuprolide-entrapped CCL-PMs than for soluble leuprolide. Importantly, the released peptide remained biologically active as demonstrated by increased and long-lasting plasma testosterone levels. This study shows that covalent linkage of peptides to CCL-PMs via hydrolytically sensitive ester bonds is a promising approach to achieving sustained systemic levels of peptides after intravenous administration.

Details

ISSN :
01683659
Volume :
205
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Controlled Release
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f524779a2bbcce18f2fed52ebd7b6ae6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jconrel.2014.12.023