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Title: Pharmacokinetics of three novel pyridinium aldoxime acetylcholinesterase reactivators in female rats. Author: Backer BS, Meek EC, Ross MK, Chambers JE. Journal: Toxicol Appl Pharmacol; 2022 Jul 01; 446():116046. PubMed ID: 35550885. Abstract: A platform of novel lipophilic substituted phenoxyalkyl pyridinium oximes was invented to reactivate organophosphate-inhibited acetylcholinesterase. This platform has provided superior efficacy in rats to the current standard of care, 2-PAM, for survival of lethal doses of nerve agent surrogates as well as evidence of brain penetration and neuroprotection. The pharmacokinetics of three of these novel oximes in female rats was studied for comparison to previous data in male rats. Compared to the published half-life of 2-PAM (less than 2 h), the lead novel oxime, Oxime 20, displayed a plasma half-life of about 5 h in both sexes of rats following intramuscular administration. Very few sex differences in pharmacokinetic parameters were apparent. Oxime 20 displayed an increase in brain concentration to plasma concentration over the initial 2 h following intramuscular administration in male rats, with a plateau at 1 h; there were no differences in brain concentrations between the sexes at 2 h. Hepatic metabolism of Oxime 20 was higher in rat microsomes than in human microsomes. The relatively long plasma half-life is likely an important factor in both the enhanced survival and the neuroprotection previously observed for Oxime 20. The metabolism data suggest that the clearance of Oxime 20 could be slower in humans than was observed in rats, which might allow less frequent administration than 2-PAM for therapy of organophosphate acute toxicity. Therefore, the pharmacokinetic data combined with our earlier efficacy data suggest that Oxime 20 has potential as a superior therapeutic for nerve agent poisoning.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]