Heroin metabolism in human blood and its impact for the design of an immunotherapeutic approach against heroin effects

Author:

Bogen Inger Lise12ORCID,Boix Fernando1ORCID,Andersen Jannike Mørch12ORCID,Steinsland Synne1,Nerem Elisabeth1,Mørland Jørg34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Section for Drug Abuse Research, Department of Forensic Sciences Oslo University Hospital Oslo Norway

2. Section for Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Biosciences, Department of Pharmacy, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences University of Oslo Oslo Norway

3. Division of Health Data and Digitalisation Norwegian Institute of Public Health Oslo Norway

4. Institute of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Medicine University of Oslo Oslo Norway

Abstract

AbstractImmunotherapeutic interventions that block drug effects by binding drug molecules to specific antibodies in the bloodstream have shown promising effects in animal studies. For heroin, which effects are mainly mediated by the metabolites 6‐acetylmorphine (6‐AM; also known as 6‐monoacetylmorphine or 6‐MAM) and morphine, the optimal antibody specificity has been discussed. In rodents, 6‐AM specific antibodies have been recommended based on the rapid metabolism of heroin to 6‐AM in the bloodstream. Since the metabolic rate of heroin in blood is unsettled in humans, we examined heroin metabolism with state‐of–the‐art analytical methodology (UHPLC–MS/MS) in freshly drawn human whole blood incubated with a wide range of heroin concentrations (1–500 μM). The half‐life of heroin was highly concentration dependent, ranging from 1.2–1.7 min for concentrations at or above 25 μM, and gradually increasing to approximately 20 min for 1 μM heroin. At concentrations that can be attained in the bloodstream shortly after an i.v. injection, approximately 70% was transformed into 6‐AM within 3 min, similar to previous observations in vivo. Our results indicate that blood enzymes play a more important role for the rapid metabolism of heroin in humans than previously assumed. This points to 6‐AM as an important target for an efficient immunotherapeutic approach to block heroin effects in humans.

Funder

Norges Forskningsråd

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmacology,Toxicology,General Medicine

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