Nephrotoxicity studies of the immunosuppressants tacrolimus (FK506) and ascomycin in rat models.

Toxicology

Immunologic Diseases Area, Abbott Laboratories, Abbott Park, IL 60064-3500, USA.

Published: February 1998

The nephrotoxic potential of ascomycin, the C21-ethyl analogue of FK506, was defined and ways explored to enhance its detection. After 14-day dosing in the Fischer-344 rat, FK506 and ascomycin reduced creatinine clearance by >50% at doses of 1 and 3 mg/kg, i.p., respectively. Ascomycin also had a 3-fold lower immunosuppressive potency in a popliteal lymph node hyperplasia assay, resulting in an equivalent therapeutic index consistent with a common mechanistic dependence on calcineurin inhibition. Renal impairment with different routes of administration was correlated with pharmacokinetics. Sensitivity of detection was not adequate with shorter dosing durations in rats with unilateral nephrectomy or in mice using a cytochrome P-450 inhibitor, SKF-525A. In 14-day studies, nephrotoxicity was not induced by continuous i.p. infusion of ascomycin at 10 mg/kg/day or daily oral administration (up to 50 mg/kg/day) in rats on a normal diet, nor by continuous i.v. infusion (up to 6 mg/kg/day) in rats on a low salt diet to enhance susceptibility. The lack of toxicity at high oral doses of FK506 or ascomycin, and the finding of non-linear oral pharmacokinetics of ascomycin show that this drug class has an oral absorption ceiling. The negative results with continuous infusion suggest that ascomycin nephrotoxicity is governed by peak drug levels. In addition to defining ways to meaningfully compare the nephrotoxic potential of FK506 derivatives, these results have implications for overall safety assessment and improved clinical use.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0300-483x(97)00167-4DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

fk506 ascomycin
12
continuous infusion
12
ascomycin
8
nephrotoxic potential
8
infusion ascomycin
8
mg/kg/day rats
8
fk506
5
nephrotoxicity studies
4
studies immunosuppressants
4
immunosuppressants tacrolimus
4

Similar Publications

Ascomycin (FK520) is a 23-membered macrolide antibiotic primarily produced by the Streptomyces hygroscopicus var. ascomyceticus. Structurally similar to tacrolimus and rapamycin, it serves as an effective immunosuppressant widely used in the treatment of rejection reactions after organ transplantation and certain autoimmune diseases.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Invasive fungal infections are a major global health issue, with current antifungal treatments being limited in effectiveness and often leading to resistance or toxicity in patients.
  • The phosphatase calcineurin (CaN) is identified as a key target for antifungal drug development, with existing inhibitors like FK506 showing antifungal potential but also causing immunosuppression.
  • Researchers are exploring modified FK520 derivatives, such as JH-FK-44, which demonstrate improved antifungal activity while reducing immunosuppressive effects, suggesting a promising path for enhancing antifungal therapies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: We compared tacrolimus concentrations obtained by the more recently US Food and Drug Administration-approved tacrolimus assay (CMIA) on the Alinity i analyzer (Abbott Laboratories) with a liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS)-based method from 2 reference laboratories. We also investigated the correlation between the CMIA tacrolimus and Elecsys tacrolimus assays.

Methods: Tacrolimus concentrations were measured in EDTA whole blood by the chemiluminescent microparticle immunoassay (CMIA) using the Alinity i analyzer, and then 2 aliquots were sent to 2 reference laboratories, both using ascomycin as the internal standard for the LC-MS/MS method.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Urine exosome mRNA-based test for monitoring kidney allograft rejection: Effects of sample transportation and storage, and interference substances.

World J Methodol

December 2023

Department of Research and Development, Thermo Fisher Scientific, West Hills, CA 91304, United States.

Background: Exosomes are 30-150 nm nanovesicles with sophisticated nucleic acids cargo, actively secreted by all cells within human body, and found in abundance in all body fluids, including urine. These extracellular vesicles have tremendous potential for next generation diagnostics, theoretically enabling noninvasive assessment of organ and tissue function liquid biopsy analysis.

Aim: Recently, feasibility of an exosomal molecular test was demonstrated for post-organ transplant monitoring: Analysis of urine-derived exosomal mRNA cargo allowed early detection of kidney allograft rejection.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Whole-blood therapeutic drug monitoring of tacrolimus is conducted to maintain tacrolimus concentrations within a safe and effective range. Changes in hematocrit cause variability in blood concentrations of tacrolimus because it is highly bound to erythrocytes. Measuring plasma concentrations may eliminate this variability; however, current methods have limitations owing to the use of cross-reactive immunoassays, plasma separation at nonbiological temperatures, and lack of clinical validation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!