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The Safety of EXPAREL ® (Bupivacaine Liposome Injectable Suspension) Administered by Peripheral Nerve Block in Rabbits and Dogs
Author(s) -
Brigitte M. Richard,
Paul E. Newton,
Laura R. Ott,
Dean Haan,
Abram N. Brubaker,
Phaedra I. Cole,
P.E. Ross,
Marlon C. Rebelatto,
Keith Nelson
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of drug delivery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-3014
pISSN - 2090-3022
DOI - 10.1155/2012/962101
Subject(s) - bupivacaine , medicine , saline , anesthesia , histopathology , pharmacokinetics , brachial plexus , peripheral nerve , nerve block , plexus , surgery , anatomy , pathology
A sustained-release DepoFoam injection formulation of bupivacaine (EXPAREL, 15 mg/mL) is currently being investigated for postsurgical analgesia via peripheral nerve block (PNB). Single-dose toxicology studies of EXPAREL (9, 18, and 30 mg/kg), bupivacaine solution (Bsol, 9 mg/kg), and saline injected around the brachial plexus nerve bundle were performed in rabbits and dogs. The endpoints included clinical pathology, pharmacokinetics, and histopathology evaluation on Day 3 and Day 15 (2/sex/group/period). EXPAREL resulted in a nearly 4-fold lower C max versus Bsol at the same dose. EXPAREL was well tolerated at doses up to 30 mg/kg. The only EXPAREL-related effect seen was minimal to mild granulomatous inflammation of adipose tissue around nerve roots (8 of 24 rabbits and 7 of 24 dogs) in the brachial plexus sites. The results indicate that EXPAREL was well tolerated in these models and did not produce nerve damage after PNB in rabbits and dogs.

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