Pharmacokinetics of intravitreal macromolecules: scaling between rats and rabbits.
2021
Abstract Rats are widely used to study ocular drug responses, whereas rabbits are the most widely used preclinical model of ocular pharmacokinetics. Despite their wide use in evaluation of intravitreally injected drugs, translational information about pharmacokinetics and dose scaling between rats and rabbits is missing. In this study, we investigated intravitreal pharmacokinetics in rats and rabbits using non-invasive ocular fluorophotometry. Fluorescein and fluorescently labeled molecules (dextrans) with different molecular weights (376 Da, 10, 150 and 500 kDa), were injected into the vitreous of rabbits and rats. Intravitreal concentrations of the compounds were determined and pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated. Overall, the elimination half-lives of the macromolecules in rat vitreous were 5–6 times shorter than in rabbits, and the half-lives were prolonged at increasing molecular weights. The apparent volumes of distribution for tested compounds in rats and rabbits were in the range of the anatomical vitreal volumes. In both species, anterior route of elimination was predominant for the dextrans, whereas fluorescein was mainly eliminated via posterior route. Rabbit-to-rat ratios for intravitreal clearance were in the range of 2 to 5 for dextrans. Therefore, 2–5 times higher doses are needed for similar drug exposure in rabbits than in rats. Also, the shorter half-lives of macromolecules in the rat vitreous must be taken into account in translation to rabbit and human studies. The scaling factors presented herein will augment translational drug development for eye diseases.
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