Affiliation:
1. University of Bologna, Department of Veterinary Medical Science, 40064 Ozzano Emilia Bologna, Italy
2. Drug Delivery and Disposition, KU Leuven Department of Pharmaceutical and Pharmacological Sciences, Herestraat 49-box 921, 3000 Leuven, Belgium
Abstract
Background:
Successful practice of clinical perinatal pharmacology requires a thorough understanding
of the pronounced physiological changes during lactation and how these changes affect various drug disposition
processes. In addition, pharmacokinetic processes unique to lactation have remained understudied. Hence, determination
of drug disposition mechanisms in lactating women and their babies remains a domain with important
knowledge gaps. Indeed, lack of data regarding infant risk during breastfeeding far too often results in discontinuation
of breastfeeding and subsequent loss of all the associated benefits to the breastfed infant. In the absence
of age-specific toxicity data, human lactation data alone are considered insufficient to rapidly generate the required
evidence regarding risks associated with medication use during lactation.
Methods:
Systematic review of literature to summarize state-of-the art non-clinical approaches that have been
developed to explore the mechanisms underlying drug milk excretion.
Results:
Several studies have reported methods to predict (to some extent) milk drug excretion rates based on
physicochemical properties of the compounds. In vitro studies with primary mammary epithelial cells appear
excellent approaches to determine transepithelial drug transport rates across the mammary epithelium. Several of
these in vitro tools have been characterized in terms of transporter expression and activity as compared to the
mammary gland tissue. In addition, with the advent of physiology-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modelling,
these in vitro transport data may prove instrumental in predicting drug milk concentration time profiles prior to
the availability of data from clinical lactation studies. In vivo studies in lactating animals have proven their utility
in elucidating the mechanisms underlying drug milk excretion.
Conclusion:
By combining various non-clinical tools (physicochemistry-based, in vitro and PBPK, in vivo animal)
for drug milk excretion, valuable and unique information regarding drug milk concentrations during lactation
can be obtained. The recently approved IMI project ConcePTION will address several of the challenges
outlined in this review.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Drug Discovery,Pharmacology
Cited by
20 articles.
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