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  • Title: Improved pharmacokinetic properties of a polyethylene glycol-modified form of interferon-beta-1a with preserved in vitro bioactivity.
    Author: Pepinsky RB, LePage DJ, Gill A, Chakraborty A, Vaidyanathan S, Green M, Baker DP, Whalley E, Hochman PS, Martin P.
    Journal: J Pharmacol Exp Ther; 2001 Jun; 297(3):1059-66. PubMed ID: 11356929.
    Abstract:
    Interferon therapies suffer from a relatively short half-life of the products in circulation. To address this issue we investigated the effects of polyethylene glycol modification (PEGylation) on the pharmacokinetic properties of human interferon (IFN)-beta-1a. PEGylation with a linear 20-kDa PEG targeted at a single site on the N-terminal amine had no deleterious effect on its specific activity in an in vitro antiviral assay. In monkeys, PEG IFN-beta-1a treatment induced neopterin and beta2-microglobulin expression (pharmacodynamic markers of activity). Systemic clearance values in monkeys, rats, and mice decreased, respectively, from 232, 261, and 247 ml/h/kg for the unmodified IFN-beta-1a to 30.5, 19.2, and 18.7 ml/h/kg for the PEGylated form, while volume of distribution values decreased from 427, 280, and 328 ml/kg to 284, 173, and 150 ml/kg. The decreased clearance and volume of distribution resulted in higher serum antiviral activity in the PEG IFN-beta-1a-treated animals. In the rat, a more extensive set of dosing routes was investigated, including intraperitoneal, intratracheal, and oral administration. Bioavailability for the PEG IFN-beta-1a was similar to the unmodified protein for each of the extravascular routes examined. For the intraperitoneal route, bioavailability was almost 100%, whereas for the oral and intratracheal routes absorption was low (<5%). In rats, subcutaneous bioavailability was moderate (28%), whereas in monkeys it was approximately 100%. In all instances an improved pharmacokinetic profile for the PEGylated IFN-beta-1a was observed. These findings demonstrate that PEGylation greatly alters the pharmacokinetic properties of IFN-beta-1a, resulting in an increase in systemic exposure following diverse routes of administration.
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