A comparative study of the iron-clearing properties of subcutaneously administered desferrioxamine B (DFO) with those of orally administered desferrithiocin sodium salt (1), desmethyl desferrithiocin (2), desazadesmethyl desferrithiocin sodium salt (3), desazadesmethyl desferrithiocin pivaloyloxymethyl ester (4), and desazadesmethyl-5,5- dimethyl desferrithiocin (5) in an iron-loaded Cebus monkey model and a non-iron overloaded bile duct-cannulated rat model is presented. All six drugs, which performed well in rodent studies, demonstrated increased efficiency in the Cebus monkey model. When administered to rodents at a daily dosage of 384 mumol/kg over a period of 10 days, drug 1 demonstrated severe renal toxicity. whereas drugs 3, 4, and 5 exhibited severe gastrointestinal (GI) toxicity. Under the same experimental protocol, drug 2 did not show significant toxic side effects. In addition, to further evaluate the iron-clearing properties of analogue 2, a dose-response study was performed in the primates that showed that iron excretion increased in a dose-dependent fashion.
A comparative study of the non-iron-overloaded, bile duct-cannulated rat and of the Cebus monkey as iron-clearance models is presented. The ability of desferrioxamine, desferrithiocin, and a pyridoxal isonicotinoyl hydrazone (PIH) analogue to clear the metal from these two animals is evaluated. Data suggest that although rodents represent a viable first-line animal screen, there is no strict correspondence between the effectiveness of a chelator in rodents and that in primates. Rodent data should be interpreted carefully as it relates to potential human trials. Iron-loading response, the similarity between multiple human and Cebus serum and hematological values, and the ability to easily observe changes in behavioral patterns clearly render the Cebus monkey the best preclinical screen.
A comparative study of the iron-clearing properties of subcutaneously (SC) administered deferoxamine (DFO) with those of orally administered 1,2-dimethyl-3-hydroxypyrid-4-one (CP20) and 1,2-diethyl-3-hydroxypyrid- 4-one (CP94) is presented. The studies were performed in both a non- iron-overloaded, bile duct-cannulated rat model and an iron-loaded Cebus monkey model. All three drugs performed well in the rodent, promoting the excretion of iron in both the urine and the bile, with total iron output efficiencies of 2.8%, 1.2%, and 7.1%, respectively. The efficiency of DFO increased slightly in the Cebus model, while that of the hydroxypyridones was essentially the same in the monkey, with total iron output efficiencies of 5.5%, 2.1%, and 7.4%, respectively. Iron balance studies showed that both DFO and CP94 were able to maintain the animals in a negative iron balance, while CP20 had little impact.
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