Abstract
Effective antirejection therapy with minimal systemic morbidity is required if limb transplantation is to become a clinical reality. We investigated whether i.a. infusion of cyclosporin A (CSA) into the vascularly isolated rabbit forelimb will distribute drug homogeneously to the tissues and produce higher local drug levels than same-dose i.v. treatment, thereby improving the therapeutic index. CSA 4.0 mg/kg/day was infused continuously via osmotic minipump into either the right brachial artery (i.a. group) or jugular vein (i.v. group) of New Zealand rabbits. Ligation of all muscles at the right mid-arm level was performed in the i.a. group to eliminate collateral circulation and simulate allografting, while leaving bone and neurovasculature intact. On day 6, CSA concentrations were measured in skin, muscle, bone, and bone marrow samples taken from different compartments of the right and left forearms in the i.a. group and right forearm only in the i.v. group. There were no significant differences between compartmental CSA levels in all tissues examined on the locally treated, right side during i.a. infusion, indicating that drug streaming from the catheter tip is not occurring in our model. During i.a. infusion, mean CSA concentrations were 4- to 7-fold higher in the right limb than in the left limb in all four tissues examined. Tissue CSA levels in the left limb were equivalent to those achieved during i.v. infusion, but CSA concentrations in blood, kidney, and liver were higher during i.a. infusion. These favorable, preliminary, single-dose pharmacokinetic results warrant further investigation in our novel rabbit model.
Footnotes
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Send reprint requests to: John H. Barker, M.D., Ph.D., Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, University of Louisville School of Medicine, 320 MDR Building, 511 South Floyd St., Louisville, KY 40292. E-mail:jhbark01{at}ulkyvm.louisville.edu
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↵1 This work was supported in part by the Jewish Hospital Foundation of Louisville, Kentucky.
- Abbreviations:
- Csystemic(i.a.)
- systemic drug concentration at steady state during i.a. infusion
- Cls
- systemic clearance
- CSA
- cyclosporin A
- CTA
- composite tissue allograft
- EMIT
- enzyme-multiplied immunoassay
- inf
- constant drug infusion rate
- QT
- target organ blood flow
- Received July 8, 1998.
- Accepted October 18, 1998.
- The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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