Glucocorticoid‐dextran conjugates as potential prodrugs for colonspecific delivery: Steady‐state pharmacokinetics in the rat
- 1 March 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Biopharmaceutics & Drug Disposition
- Vol. 15 (2) , 151-161
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bdd.2510150207
Abstract
Chronic colitis, e.g., ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease, is presently treated with glucocorticoids and other antiinflammatory agents. Side-effects limit chronic glucocorticoid therapy. The dose, and consequently the side-effects, may be reduced by using prodrugs that selectively deliver drug to the colon. We previously synthesized glucocorticoid-dextran conjugates in which dexamethasone was attached to dextran (weight-average molecular weight = 72 600) using dicarboxylic acid linkers (succinate and glutarate). In the present study, dexamethasone-succinate-dextran and dexamethasone-glutarate-dextran were administered to two groups of male Sprague-Dawley rats by intragastric infusion. In two additional groups, disodium dexamethasone phosphate and dexamethasone hemisuccinate were each administered by subcutaneous infusion. In a fifth group, dexamethasone was administered by intragastric infusion. All groups were infused for sufficient time for steady state to be achieved. Colon-specific delivery was quantified using a drug-delivery index (DDI) in which steady-state dexamethasone concentrations in the cecum and colon were compared with those measured in blood after separate administrations of dexamethasone and dexamethasone-dextran conjugate. The colonic DDI values for dexamethasone-succinate-dextran and dexamethasone-glutarate-dextran were approximately seven and four, respectively. These values were a result of higher tissue concentrations and lower blood concentrations of dexamethasone after intragastric administration of the conjugates compared to subcutaneous and intragastric administration of dexamethasone. The pharmacokinetics of methyl-prednisolone was also investigated after subcutaneous infusion. Observed cecal and colonic tissue-to-blood ratios of 19:1 and 12:1, respectively, showed that this drug is extensively delivered to the large intestine even after subcutaneous administration.Keywords
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