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The pharmacokinetics of 3-fluoroamphetamine following delivery using clinically relevant routes of administration
Jiang, Y., Ray, A., Junaid, M. S. A., Bhattaccharjee, S. A., Kelley, K., Banga, A. K., Blough, B. E., & Murnane, K. S. (2019). The pharmacokinetics of 3-fluoroamphetamine following delivery using clinically relevant routes of administration. Drug Delivery and Translational Research, 10(1), 271-281. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13346-019-00685-4
3-Fluoroamphetamine (also called PAL-353) is a synthetic amphetamine analog that has been investigated for cocaine use disorder (CUD), yet no studies have characterized its pharmacokinetics (PK). In the present study, we determined the PK of PAL-353 in male Sprague Dawley rats following intravenous bolus injection (5 mg/kg). Plasma samples were analyzed using a novel bioanalytical method that coupled liquid-liquid extraction and LC-MS/MS. The primary PK parameters determined by WinNonlin were a C-0 (ng/mL) of 1412.09 +/- 196.12 and a plasma half-life of 2.27 +/- 0.67 h. As transdermal delivery may be an optimal approach to delivering PAL-353 for CUD, we assessed its PK profile following application of 50 mg of transdermal gel (10% w/w drug over 5 cm(2)). The 10% w/w gel resulted in a short lag time, sustained delivery, and a rapid clearance in plasma immediately after removal. The rodent PK data were verified by examining in vitro permeation through human epidermis mounted on Franz diffusion cells. An in vitro-in vivo correlation (IVIVC) analysis was performed using the Phoenix IVIVC toolkit to assess the predictive relationship between rodent and human skin absorption/permeation. The in vitro permeation study revealed a dose-proportional cumulative and steady-state flux with similar to 70% of drug permeated. The fraction absorbed in vivo and fraction permeated in vitro showed a linear relationship. In conclusion, we have characterized the PK profile of PAL-353, demonstrated that it has favorable PK properties for transdermal administration for CUD, and provided preliminary evidence of the capacity of rodent data to predict human skin flux.