A high‐precision view of intercompartmental drug transport via simultaneous, seconds‐resolved, in situ measurements in the vein and brain

Author:

Gerson Julian12,Erdal Murat Kaan3ORCID,Dauphin‐Ducharme Philippe4,Idili Andrea45,Hespanha Joao P.3,Plaxco Kevin W.467,Kippin Tod E.1278ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences University of California, Santa Barbara Santa Barbara California USA

2. Neuroscience Research Institute University of California, Santa Barbara Santa Barbara California USA

3. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of California, Santa Barbara Santa Barbara California USA

4. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry University of California, Santa Barbara Santa Barbara California USA

5. Department of Chemical Science and Technologies University of Rome Tor Vergata Rome Italy

6. Center for Bioengineering University of California, Santa Barbara Santa Barbara California USA

7. Interdepartmental Program in Biomolecular Science and Engineering University of California, Santa Barbara Santa Barbara California USA

8. Department of Molecular Cellular and Developmental Biology University of California, Santa Barbara Santa Barbara California USA

Abstract

Background and PurposeThe ability to measure specific molecules at multiple sites within the body simultaneously, and with a time resolution of seconds, could greatly advance our understanding of drug transport and elimination.Experimental ApproachAs a proof‐of‐principle demonstration, here we describe the use of electrochemical aptamer‐based (EAB) sensors to measure transport of the antibiotic vancomycin from the plasma (measured in the jugular vein) to the cerebrospinal fluid (measured in the lateral ventricle) of live rats with temporal resolution of a few seconds.Key ResultsIn our first efforts, we made measurements solely in the ventricle. Doing so we find that, although the collection of hundreds of concentration values over a single drug lifetime enables high‐precision estimates of the parameters describing intracranial transport, due to a mathematical equivalence, the data produce two divergent descriptions of the drug's plasma pharmacokinetics that fit the in‐brain observations equally well. The simultaneous collection of intravenous measurements, however, resolves this ambiguity, enabling high‐precision (typically of ±5 to ±20% at 95% confidence levels) estimates of the key pharmacokinetic parameters describing transport from the blood to the cerebrospinal fluid in individual animals.Conclusions and ImplicationsThe availability of simultaneous, high‐density ‘in‐vein’ (plasma) and ‘in‐brain’ (cerebrospinal fluid) measurements provides unique opportunities to explore the assumptions almost universally employed in earlier compartmental models of drug transport, allowing the quantitative assessment of, for example, the pharmacokinetic effects of physiological processes such as the bulk transport of the drug out of the CNS via the dural venous sinuses.

Funder

Korea National Institute of Health

Publisher

Wiley

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