Water soluble 2'-taxol poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) esters have been synthesized and shown to function in vitro as prodrugs. However, in vivo experiments clearly establish that in order for these prodrugs to behave in a predictable fashion, the molecular weight of PEG must be of such magnitude so as to maintain a t1/2(circulation) > t1/2(hydrolysis). When PEG derivatives of molecular weight approximately 40 kDa were employed with paclitaxel, ca. 4% by weight of paclitaxel was carried by the water soluble prodrug form, and equivalent in vivo toxicity and increased life expectancy in the P388-treated mouse was observed. An effective method for prescreening prodrugs was found to be the acute murine lethality, which reflects the equivalency of the solubilized transport form and the native drug.
A general methodology for synthesizing poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) prodrugs of amino-containing compounds has been developed and constitutes the basis for solubilization of insoluble drugs, extending plasma circulating half-lives and, in the case of anticancer agents, apparent tumor accumulation. Thus, we have successfully designed PEG conjugated specifiers or "triggers" as part of a double-prodrug strategy that relies, first, on enzymatic separation of PEG followed by the classical and rapid 1,4- or 1, 6-benzyl elimination reaction releasing the amine (drug) bound in the form of a carbamate. The prodrug trigger was comprised of ester, carbonate, carbamate, or amide bonds in order to secure predictable rates of hydrolysis. Further refinement of the hydrolysis was accomplished by the introduction of steric hindrance through the use of ortho substituents on the benzyl component of the prodrug. This modification led to longer circulating plasma half-lives of the final tripartate form. The "ortho" effect also had the beneficial effect of directing nucleophilic attack almost exclusively to the activated benzyl 6-position of the heterobifunctional intermediates. In vivo testing of the PEG daunorubicin prodrugs (transport forms) prepared in the course of this study ultimately identified the type 1 carbamate (34b), with a circulating t(1/2) of 4 h, as the most effective derivative for solid tumor growth inhibition.
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