AIDS encephalopathy is an insidious complication of human immunodeficiency virus infection which is difficult to treat because of the poor uptake of many potentially useful antiretroviral drugs through the blood-brain barrier. A chemical delivery system (CDS) for zidovudine (AZT) based on redox trapping within the brain has been prepared and tested in several animal models to circumvent this limitation. The behavior of the AZT-CDS in the dog was considered. Parenteral administration of AZT resulted in rapid systemic elimination and poor uptake by the central nervous system. Ratios of the area under the concentration-time curve of AZT for cerebrospinal fluid to that for blood were 0.32, and ratios of the area under the concentration-time curve of AZT for brain to that for blood were approximately 0.25. Administration of an aqueous formulation of the AZT-CDS resulted in rapid tissue uptake and conversion of the CDS to the corresponding quaternary salt with the subsequent production of AZT. Delivered in this way, the levels of AZT in brain were 1.75- to 3.3-fold higher than those associated with conventional AZT administration. In addition, the levels of AZT in blood were 46% lower than those associated with AZT administration. The higher concentrations in brain and lower concentration in blood combined to significantly increase the ratio of the concentration of AZT in the brain to that in blood after AZT-CDS administration compared to that after AZT dosing.
Complexation of carbamazepine with 2-hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin was performed to provide improved formulations of this widely used antiepileptic drug. Based on this approach, liquid dosage forms were configured for both parenteral and oral use. Intravenous administration of an aqueous carbamazepine x 2-hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin (CBZ x HPbetaCD) complex at a CBZ dose of 20 mg/kg was well tolerated and generated high initial drug levels that fell monoexponentially as a function of time, yielding a plasma elimination half-life of 38 min. Oral studies were completed with three preparations: a commercially available tablet and suspension, as well as a CBZ x HPbetaCD oral solution. Oral administration of tablets gave erratic and slow absorption, leading to maximum CBZ concentrations (C(max)) of <2 microg/mL, which were manifested only at 2.5 h after drug dosing. The absolute bioavailability of CBZ from the tablets was approximately 25%. Both the suspension and CBZ x HPbetaCD solution gave a significantly improved profile. Thus, the liquid oral dosage forms approximately doubled the oral bioavailability of CBZ compared with the tablets.
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