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Subcutaneous Implants of a Cholesterol-Triglyceride-Buprenorphine Suspension in Rats
Author(s) -
Michael Guarnieri,
Cory Brayton,
Rachel Sarabia-Estrada,
Betty Tyler,
Patrick E. McKnight,
Louis J. DeTolla
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of veterinary medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2356-7708
pISSN - 2314-6966
DOI - 10.1155/2017/3102567
Subject(s) - urinalysis , medicine , subcutaneous injection , cholesterol , triglyceride , drug , hematology , buprenorphine , adverse effect , pharmacology , histopathology , anesthesia , pathology , opioid , urinary system , receptor
A Target Animal Safety protocol was used to examine adverse events in male and female Fischer F344/NTac rats treated with increasing doses of a subcutaneous implant of a lipid suspension of buprenorphine. A single injection of 0.65 mg/kg afforded clinically significant blood levels of drug for 3 days. Chemistry, hematology, coagulation, and urinalysis values with 2- to 10-fold excess doses of the drug-lipid suspension were within normal limits. Histopathology findings were unremarkable. The skin and underlying tissue surrounding the drug injection were unremarkable. Approximately 25% of a cohort of rats given the excess doses of 1.3, 3.9, and 6.5 mg/kg displayed nausea-related behavior consisting of intermittent and limited excess grooming and self-gnawing. These results confirm the safety of cholesterol-triglyceride carrier systems for subcutaneous drug delivery of buprenorphine in laboratory animals and further demonstrate the utility of lipid-based carriers as scaffolds for subcutaneous, long-acting drug therapy.

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