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1.
Int J Pharm ; 628: 122273, 2022 Nov 25.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36228881

Pharmaceutical toxicity evaluations often use in vitro systems involving primary cells, cell lines or red blood cells (RBCs). Cell-based analyses ('bioassays') can be cumbersome and typically rely on hard-to-standardize biological materials. Amphotericin B (AmB) toxicity evaluations are primarily based on potassium release from RBCs and share these limitations. This study evaluates the potential substitution of two physicochemical AmB toxicity approaches for the bioassay: Ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy (UV-vis) and in vitro drug release kinetics. UV-vis spectral analyses indicated that liposomal AmB's (L-AmB) main peak position (λmax) and peak ratio (OD346/OD322) are potential toxicity surrogates. Similarly, two first-order release parameters derived from USP-4 in vitro drug release analyses also provided linear relationships with toxicity. These were the initial, overall drug release rate and the ratio of loose to tight AmB pools. Positive slopes and high correlation coefficients (R2 > 0.9) characterized all interrelations between physicochemical parameters and toxicity. These tests converted the manufacturing variables' nonlinear (i.e., curvilinear) relationships with in vitro toxicity to linear responses. Three different toxicity attenuation approaches (2 manufacturing, 1 formulation), covering formulation composition and process aspects, support this approach's universality. These data suggest that one or more spectral and kinetic physicochemical tests can be surrogates for L-AmB in vitro toxicity testing.


Amphotericin B , Antifungal Agents , Amphotericin B/toxicity , Amphotericin B/chemistry , Antifungal Agents/toxicity , Antifungal Agents/chemistry , Liposomes , Drug Liberation
2.
Asian J Pharm Sci ; 17(4): 544-556, 2022 Jul.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36105314

Amphotericin B (AmB) is an amphiphilic drug commonly formulated in liposomes and administered intravenously to treat systemic fungal infections. Recent studies on the liposomal drug product have shed light on the AmB aggregation status in the bilayer, which heat treatment (curing) modifies. Although toxicity was found related to aggregation status - loose aggregates significantly more toxic than tight aggregates - the precise mechanism linking aggregation and toxicity was not well understood. This study directly measured drug release rate from various AmB liposomal preparations made with modified curing protocols to evaluate correlations among drug aggregation state, drug release, and in vitro toxicity. UV-Vis spectroscopy of these products detected unique curing-induced changes in the UV spectral features: a ∼25 nm blue-shift of the main absorption peak (λmax) in aqueous buffer and a decrease in the OD346/OD322 ratio upon thermal curing, reflecting tighter aggregation. In vitro release testing (IVRT) data showed, by applying and fitting first-order release kinetic models for one or two pools, that curing impacts two significant changes: a 3-5-fold drop in the overall drug release rate and a ten-fold decrease in the ratio between the loosely aggregated and the tightly aggregated, more thermodynamically stable drug pool. The kinetic data thus corroborated the trend independently deduced from the UV-Vis spectral data. The in vitro toxicity assay indicated a decreased toxicity with curing, as shown by the significantly increased concentration, causing half-maximal potassium release (TC50). The data suggest that the release of AmB requires dissociation of the tight complexes within the bilayer and that the reduced toxicity relates to this slower rate of dissociation. This study demonstrates the relationship between AmB aggregation status within the lipid bilayer and drug release (directly measured rate constants), providing a mechanistic link between aggregation status and in vitro toxicity in the liposomal formulations.

3.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 67(2 Pt 2): 027205, 2003 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12636864

The relationship between the Kolmogorov-Sinai entropy, h(KS) and the self-diffusion coefficient D is studied for two classical simple fluid systems with purely repulsive potentials (one system with a Wayne-Chandler-Anderson potential and the other with a hard-sphere potential). Numerical simulation data for h(KS) and D, normalized by the average collision frequency nu and the diameter of the particle sigma as natural units of time and distance, reveal that, in the region spanning from normal liquid up to near solidification (0.50< or =rho< or =0.93), the Kolmogorov-Sinai entropy has a power law dependeney on the self-diffusion coefficient of the form h(KS)/nu proportional, variant (D/sigma(2)nu)(eta), in which eta is independent of density and temperature.

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