0000000000305716
AUTHOR
Joan Freixas
Activity–Bioavailability balance in Oral Drug Development for a Selected Group of 6‐Fluoroquinolones
Abstract A nomogram is proposed to select the best candidate in drug development studies with quinolones and is intended to substitute other possible models. The nomogram is referred to as an activity–bioavailability balance (ABB) because it includes the following two criteria: ABB= 1 / gm MIC ( drug candidate ) 1 /gm MIC ( ciprofloxacin ) · F calc \( drug candidate \) F calc ( ciproflaxacin ) . The in vitro activity of a group of 4′ N ‐alkyl‐ciprofloxacin derivatives was determined together with that of ciprofloxacin, initially against some reference strains and subsequently against 159 clinical isolates of eight selected species. The inverse of the geometric mean of the lowest concentrati…
Biophysical Models as an Approach To Study Passive Absorption in Drug Development: 6-Fluoroquinolones
A preliminary study attempting to assess and explain the intestinal absorption of a series of antibacterial 7-piperazinyl-6-fluoroquinolones is presented. The synthesis, n-octanol partition coefficients, intrinsic rat gut in situ absorption rate constants, and in vitro antibacterial activity data found for these homologous compounds are described. A fluorimetric, reverse-phase HPLC method was performed for the quantification of the quinolones in absorption and partition samples. Equations based on two classic biophysical absorption models are given for predicting the intrinsic absorption features of the series according to the partition data or merely single structural parameters. In situ a…
Effects of Ethanol on Intestinal Absorption of Drugs
The effect of chronic alcohol intake on the intestinal absorption of seven compounds belonging to a homologous series (ciprofloxacin derivatives) was evaluated using an in situ rat gut technique that measures the intrinsic absorption rates of the compounds both in control and chronic alcohol-fed rats. For chronic alcohol treatment, the animals were fed a liquid diet containing ethanol (36% of calories), whereas an isocaloric diet was given to the pair-fed control animals. The biophysical absorption model, relating the intestinal absorption rate constants and partition indexes of the tested compounds, was then established either for control or alcohol-fed animals. Differences were analyzed a…
Intrinsic Absolute Bioavailability Prediction in Rats Based on In Situ Absorption Rate Constants and/or In Vitro Partition Coefficients: 6‐Fluoroquinolones
A preliminary study attempting to predict the intrinsic absolute bioavailability of a group of antibacterial 6-fluoroquinolones-including true and imperfect homologues as well as heterologues-was carried out. The intrinsic absolute bioavailability of the test compounds, F, was assessed on permanently cannulated conscious rats by comparing the trapezoidal normalized areas under the plasma concentration-time curves obtained by intravenous and oral routes (n = 8-12). The high-performance liquid chromatography analytical methods used for plasma samples are described. Prediction of the absolute bioavailability of the compounds was based on their intrinsic rat gut in situ absorption rate constant…
Pharmacokinetics, bioavailability and absorption of flumequine in the rat.
Abstract The study demonstrates that the oral extent of bioavailability of flumequine in the rat, relative to the intravenous injection, is complete (0.94±0.04) and not significantly different from that found by the intraduodenal route (0.95±0.04). The rate of oral bioavailability, however, is slow ( k a =1.20±0.07 h −1 ; T max =2.0 h), but enough to maintain plasma levels above the minimal inhibitory concentration of the most common pathogens for an extended period of time (about 10 h). The reason for the oral absorption slowness could be a slow gastric emptying, an adsorption to the gastric mucosae, a precipitation in the gastric medium or any other feature concerning the stomach as the i…