Author:
Errecalde J.,Lifschitz A.,Vecchioli G.,Ceballos L.,Errecalde F.,Ballent M.,Marín G.,Daniele M.,Turic E.,Spitzer E.,Toneguzzo F.,Gold S.,Krolewiecki A.,Alvarez L.,Lanusse C.
Abstract
AbstractHigh ivermectin (IVM) concentrations suppress in vitro SARS-CoV-2 replication. Nasal IVM spray (N-IVM-spray) administration may contribute to attaining high drug concentrations in nasopharyngeal (NP) tissue, a primary site of virus entrance/replication. The safety and pharmacokinetic performance of a new N-IVM spray formulation in a piglet model were assessed. Crossbred piglets (10–12 kg) were treated with either one or two (12 h apart) doses of N-IVM-spray (2 mg, 1 puff/nostril) or orally (0.2 mg/kg). The overall safety of N-IVM-spray was assessed (clinical, haematological, serum biochemical determinations), and histopathology evaluation of the application site tissues performed. The IVM concentration profiles measured in plasma and respiratory tract tissues (nasopharynx and lungs) after the nasal spray treatment (one and two applications) were compared with those achieved after the oral administration. Animals tolerated well the novel N–IVM-spray formulation. No local/systemic adverse events were observed. After nasal administration, the highest IVM concentrations were measured in NP and lung tissues. Significant increases in IVM concentration profiles in both NP-tissue and lungs were observed after the 2-dose nasal administrations. The nasal/oral IVM concentration ratios in NP and lung tissues (at 6 h post-dose) markedely increased by repeating the spray application. The fast attainment of high and persistent IVM concentrations in NP tissue is the main advantage of the nasal over the oral route. These original results are encouraging to support the undertaking of further clinical trials to evaluate the safety/efficacy of the nasal IVM spray application in the treatment and/or prevention of COVID-19.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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