Safety studies of post-surgical buprenorphine therapy for mice

Author:

Traul Karl A1,Romero Jennell B2,Brayton Cory2,DeTolla Louis3,Forbes-McBean Nadine2,Halquist Matthew S4,Karnes H Thomas4,Sarabia-Estrada Rachel5,Tomlinson Michael J6,Tyler Betty M5,Ye Xiaobu5,Zadnik Patricia5,Guarnieri Michael5

Affiliation:

1. Pharmaceutical Consulting, Lawrenceville, NJ, USA

2. Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Department of Molecular and Comparative Pathobiology, Baltimore, MD, USA

3. University of Maryland, School of Medicine, Departments of Pathology, Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases and Public Health, and the Program of Comparative Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA

4. Virginia Commonwealth University School of Pharmacy, Department of Pharmaceutics, Richmond, VA, USA

5. Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Department of Neurological Surgery, Baltimore, MD, USA

6. Nova Pathology, Bellingham, WA, USA

Abstract

The use of appropriate analgesia in laboratory mice may be suboptimal because of concerns about adverse events (AE). Target Animal Safety trials were conducted to determine the safety of an extended-release suspension of buprenorphine. Drug or control suspensions were injected subcutaneously in surgically-treated BALB/c mice anesthetized with ketamine–xylazine to mimic post-operative conditions in which the compound might commonly be administered. Single and repeat five-fold (5×) excesses of the 3.25 mg/kg intended dose were used to provoke potential AE. Trials included prospective measurements of weight changes, blood chemistry, hematology, and histopathology. Clinical and histopathology findings were similar in drug-treated and control mice in a four-day trial using a single 16.25 mg/kg, 5× overdose of the drug. In a 12-day trial, which used a total buprenorphine dose of 48.75 mg/kg, clinical and histopathology values were also similar in control and drug-treated female mice. In the male arm of the repeat-overdose trial, two of eight mice died on the morning of day 12, three days following the third 16.25 mg/kg overdose administration. Histopathology did not reveal a cause of death. In a 14-month trial using a single 3.25 mg/kg dose of the drug, no significant findings identified potential AE. These findings indicate a high tolerance to an extended-release buprenorphine suspension administered post-operatively in mice with appropriate husbandry.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology

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