An injectable oleogel-based bupivacaine formulation for prolonged non-opioid post-operative analgesia.
Drug Deliv Transl Res
; 2024 Aug 06.
Article
en En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-39107674
ABSTRACT
Opioid-based medications remain the mainstay of post-operative pain management, even though they are associated with a plethora of adverse effects including addiction, nausea, constipation, cognitive impairment, respiratory depression, and accidental death due to overdose. Local anesthetics are effective at controlling the intense pain after surgery but their short duration of effect limits their clinical utility in post-operative pain management. In this manuscript, an optimized injectable oleogel-based formulation of bupivacaine for multi-day post-operative pain management was characterized on the benchtop and assessed in two clinically-relevant porcine post-operative pain models. Benchtop characterization verified the optimized oleogel-based bupivacaine formulation design, demonstrating a homogenous stable oleogel with sufficient injectability due to shear-thinning properties, high drug loading capacity and first-order drug release kinetics over 5 days. In vivo assessment in two pig post-operative pain models demonstrated that the oleogel-based bupivacaine formulation can provide statistically significant multi-day analgesia in two routes of administration local instillation directly into a surgical site and ultrasound-guided peripheral nerve block injection. Pharmacokinetic assessment of ALX005 found that Cmax values were not statistically different from the bupivacaine HCl control, with no clinical signs of local anesthetic systemic toxicity observed, when administering up to 2.7 and 8.1 times the control dose of bupivacaine HCl. This study demonstrates the pre-clinical safety and efficacy of an injectable oleogel-based bupivacaine formulation and explores its utility as a single-administration long-acting local anesthetic product for post-operative pain management that can be used in both local and regional anesthetic applications.
Texto completo:
1
Colección:
01-internacional
Base de datos:
MEDLINE
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Drug Deliv Transl Res
Año:
2024
Tipo del documento:
Article
País de afiliación:
Estados Unidos