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Comparison of Oral, Intranasal and Aerosol Administration of Amiodarone in Rats as a Model of Pulmonary Phospholipidosis

‘Foamy’ alveolar macrophages (FAM) observed in nonclinical toxicology studies during inhaled drug development may indicate drug-induced phospholipidosis, but can also derive from adaptive non-adverse mechanisms. Orally administered amiodarone is currently used as a model of pulmonary phospholipidosi...

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Autores principales: Patel, Aateka, Hoffman, Ewelina, Ball, Doug, Klapwijk, Jan, Steven, Rory T., Dexter, Alex, Bunch, Josephine, Baker, Daniel, Murnane, Darragh, Hutter, Victoria, Page, Clive, Dailey, Lea Ann, Forbes, Ben
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6680908/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31319538
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics11070345
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author Patel, Aateka
Hoffman, Ewelina
Ball, Doug
Klapwijk, Jan
Steven, Rory T.
Dexter, Alex
Bunch, Josephine
Baker, Daniel
Murnane, Darragh
Hutter, Victoria
Page, Clive
Dailey, Lea Ann
Forbes, Ben
author_facet Patel, Aateka
Hoffman, Ewelina
Ball, Doug
Klapwijk, Jan
Steven, Rory T.
Dexter, Alex
Bunch, Josephine
Baker, Daniel
Murnane, Darragh
Hutter, Victoria
Page, Clive
Dailey, Lea Ann
Forbes, Ben
author_sort Patel, Aateka
collection PubMed
description ‘Foamy’ alveolar macrophages (FAM) observed in nonclinical toxicology studies during inhaled drug development may indicate drug-induced phospholipidosis, but can also derive from adaptive non-adverse mechanisms. Orally administered amiodarone is currently used as a model of pulmonary phospholipidosis and it was hypothesized that aerosol administration would produce phospholipidosis-induced FAM that could be characterized and used in comparative inhalation toxicology. Han-Wistar rats were given amiodarone via (1) intranasal administration (6.25 mg/kg) on two days, (2) aerosol administration (3 mg/kg) on two days, (3) aerosol administration (10 mg/kg) followed by three days of 30 mg/kg or (4) oral administration (100 mg/kg) for 7 days. Alveolar macrophages in bronchoalveolar lavage were evaluated by differential cell counting and high content fluorescence imaging. Histopathology and mass-spectrometry imaging (MSI) were performed on lung slices. The higher dose aerosolised amiodarone caused transient pulmonary inflammation (p < 0.05), but only oral amiodarone resulted in FAM (p < 0.001). MSI of the lungs of orally treated rats revealed a homogenous distribution of amiodarone and a putative phospholipidosis marker, di-22:6 bis-monoacylglycerol, throughout lung tissue whereas aerosol administration resulted in localization of both compounds around the airway lumen. Thus, unlike oral administration, aerosolised amiodarone failed to produce the expected FAM responses.
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spelling pubmed-66809082019-08-09 Comparison of Oral, Intranasal and Aerosol Administration of Amiodarone in Rats as a Model of Pulmonary Phospholipidosis Patel, Aateka Hoffman, Ewelina Ball, Doug Klapwijk, Jan Steven, Rory T. Dexter, Alex Bunch, Josephine Baker, Daniel Murnane, Darragh Hutter, Victoria Page, Clive Dailey, Lea Ann Forbes, Ben Pharmaceutics Article ‘Foamy’ alveolar macrophages (FAM) observed in nonclinical toxicology studies during inhaled drug development may indicate drug-induced phospholipidosis, but can also derive from adaptive non-adverse mechanisms. Orally administered amiodarone is currently used as a model of pulmonary phospholipidosis and it was hypothesized that aerosol administration would produce phospholipidosis-induced FAM that could be characterized and used in comparative inhalation toxicology. Han-Wistar rats were given amiodarone via (1) intranasal administration (6.25 mg/kg) on two days, (2) aerosol administration (3 mg/kg) on two days, (3) aerosol administration (10 mg/kg) followed by three days of 30 mg/kg or (4) oral administration (100 mg/kg) for 7 days. Alveolar macrophages in bronchoalveolar lavage were evaluated by differential cell counting and high content fluorescence imaging. Histopathology and mass-spectrometry imaging (MSI) were performed on lung slices. The higher dose aerosolised amiodarone caused transient pulmonary inflammation (p < 0.05), but only oral amiodarone resulted in FAM (p < 0.001). MSI of the lungs of orally treated rats revealed a homogenous distribution of amiodarone and a putative phospholipidosis marker, di-22:6 bis-monoacylglycerol, throughout lung tissue whereas aerosol administration resulted in localization of both compounds around the airway lumen. Thus, unlike oral administration, aerosolised amiodarone failed to produce the expected FAM responses. MDPI 2019-07-17 /pmc/articles/PMC6680908/ /pubmed/31319538 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics11070345 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Patel, Aateka
Hoffman, Ewelina
Ball, Doug
Klapwijk, Jan
Steven, Rory T.
Dexter, Alex
Bunch, Josephine
Baker, Daniel
Murnane, Darragh
Hutter, Victoria
Page, Clive
Dailey, Lea Ann
Forbes, Ben
Comparison of Oral, Intranasal and Aerosol Administration of Amiodarone in Rats as a Model of Pulmonary Phospholipidosis
title Comparison of Oral, Intranasal and Aerosol Administration of Amiodarone in Rats as a Model of Pulmonary Phospholipidosis
title_full Comparison of Oral, Intranasal and Aerosol Administration of Amiodarone in Rats as a Model of Pulmonary Phospholipidosis
title_fullStr Comparison of Oral, Intranasal and Aerosol Administration of Amiodarone in Rats as a Model of Pulmonary Phospholipidosis
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of Oral, Intranasal and Aerosol Administration of Amiodarone in Rats as a Model of Pulmonary Phospholipidosis
title_short Comparison of Oral, Intranasal and Aerosol Administration of Amiodarone in Rats as a Model of Pulmonary Phospholipidosis
title_sort comparison of oral, intranasal and aerosol administration of amiodarone in rats as a model of pulmonary phospholipidosis
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6680908/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31319538
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics11070345
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