使用酯作为口服内酰胺类抗生素的前药。

Q4 Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics Pharmaceutical biotechnology Pub Date : 1998-01-01 DOI:10.1007/0-306-47384-4_15
L Mizen, G Burton
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引用次数: 22

摘要

很明显,在发现和开发新的β -内酰胺前药的过程中所遵循的事件顺序在我们研究过的许多病例历史中都是相似的,实际上也与我们所遵循的方法相似。首先,我们选择一系列合适的前药部分,这些前药部分要么包含全新的结构,要么是从现有数据库中推断出来的(考虑到潜在毒性的报告),要么两者兼而有之。这些前药的成功制备以及为确保其已知纯度和稳定性而进行的研究并不容易,正如预期的那样,这是最初的批准/禁止决定。通常,下一阶段是评估给药前酯后母体分子的生物利用度是否通过灌胃实验动物物种而增加。使用哪种物种的选择通常是根据那些特定实验室和文献中可获得的信息最多而做出的。正如表4和图1所示,这一过程可能令人沮丧地误导。增加动物物种的范围并不能提高预测人类生物利用度的能力。水解研究对于确保任何新的前药在人体组织中水解都是重要的,并且对于澄清为什么特定的前药在动物中没有达到预期的效果也很重要。在选择之后,在进行首次人类生物利用度研究之前,必须确定用于安全性评估的动物物种中水解的位置和速度。对绝对口服生物利用度的评估并不总是进行的。这似乎不仅对选定的动物物种,而且对人类的研究都至关重要。在缺乏这些数据的情况下,很难判断是否可以通过修改酯部分进一步增加口服摄取,并在开发阶段确定配方修改是否可以增加生物利用度。当前体药物是针对已经可用于人类的可注射的β -内酰胺开发时,这将没有问题,但在开发一种全新的β -内酰胺抗生素期间,这将是一个重要的考虑因素,因为没有可用于人类的非肠外数据。动物数据并不完全具有预测性。前药的开发是不容易的,因为在评估过程中,前药的性质会与母体化合物的性质叠加在一起,这是物种差异的结果。然而,技术的进步使我们能够更精确地测定浓度,更有效地确定基本的物理化学性质,通过使用体外系统了解吸收过程,并通过使用不断发展的计算机软件更全面地分析数据。提高内酰胺类抗生素口服生物利用度的前药方法提供了临床上有价值的药物,并将继续发展。尽管存在固有的困难,但多年来对母体化合物的物理化学和生物学性质与完整的前药酯之间关系的了解,有助于设计新的前药,并开发了许多新的助剂。
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The use of esters as prodrugs for oral delivery of beta-lactam antibiotics.

It is apparent that the sequence of events that has been followed in the approach to the discovery and development of a new beta-lactam prodrug has been similar in many of the case histories we have studied and indeed similar to the approach we have followed. Initially, we select a suitable series of prodrug moieties, which either comprises totally novel structures or is deduced from the data bases available (bearing in mind reports of potential toxicity) or both. The successful preparation of these prodrugs and the studies undertaken to ensure they are of known purity and stability is not easy and, as would be expected, is the initial go/no-go decision. Usually, the next stage has involved the assessment of whether or not bioavailability of the parent molecule is increased after administration of the prodrug ester by gavage to laboratory animal species. The selection of which species to use has very often been made according to which has the most information available in those particular laboratories and in the literature. It is this process that can be dishearteningly misleading as was demonstrated in Table IV and Fig. 1. Increasing the range of animal species does not lead to a better ability to predict bioavailability in humans. Hydrolysis studies are important to ensure that any novel prodrug will hydrolyze in human tissues, and also in the clarification of why a particular prodrug is not performing as expected in animals. After selection, it is essential to determine where and how rapidly hydrolysis takes place in the animal species to be used for safety evaluation prior to the first bioavailability studies in humans. The assessment of absolute oral bioavailability has not always been undertaken. This would seem critical for studies in not only the selected animal species but also in humans. In the absence of these data it is difficult to judge whether oral uptake can be increased further by modifying the ester moieties and at the development stage to determine whether or not modifications in formulation could increase bioavailability. When the prodrug is being developed for an injectable beta-lactam already available for humans, there would be no problem, but it would be an important consideration during the development of an entirely novel beta-lactam antibiotic for which no parenteral data are available in humans. Animal data are not totally predictive. The development of prodrugs is not easy, as a consequence of species differences in the properties of the prodrug superimposed on those of the parent compound during the evaluation. However, technical advances have enabled us to assay concentrations more precisely, determine basic physicochemical properties more efficiently, understand absorption processes by the use of in vitro systems, and analyze data far more comprehensively by the use of ever-evolving computer software. The prodrug approach to increasing the oral bioavailability of beta-lactam antibiotics has provided clinically valuable agents and continues. Despite the inherent difficulties, knowledge gained over the years, of the relationships between physicochemical and biological properties of the parent compound and the intact prodrug ester, has contributed to the design of novel prodrugs and a number of novel auxiliaries have been developed.

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