Grants and Contracts Details
Description
Naltrexone, an opioid antagonist, is currently used in oral tablet form to help maintain opioid addicts in
a drug-free state. Most recently, naltrexone has been indicated as an adjunct in the treatment of alcohol
dependence, as well as reported to reduce alcohol craving in certain alcoholic populations. Transdermal
delivery of naltrexone is desirable for opioid addicts and alcoholics in order to help reduce side effects
associated with oral therapy and improve compliance. Naltrexone itself does not have the essential
physicochemical properties that would allow a therapeutic dose of the drug to cross the human skin barrier.
We plan to continue designing and synthesizing derivatives (prodrugs), which are more skin permeable than
naltrexone, in order to make a therapeutically successful drug delivery system.
We hypothesize that prodrugs of naltrexone will improve the transdermal delivery rate of naltrexone,
and that these prodrugs will make excellent research tools for investigating quantitative structure-permeability
relationships (QSPRs) for transdermal flux and concurrent metabolism. These prodrugs should improve
naltrexone delivery rates across the skin, because they are more lipophilic, less crystalline, and therefore more
soluble than naltrexone. The specific aims of this project include: (1) to synthesize a series of naltrexone
prodrugs designed to elucidate fundamental QSPRs for transdermal flux and concurrent metabolism of the
prodrugs, (2) to characterize the physicochemical parameters of the naltrexone prodrugs, including molecular
weight, molecular volume, lipophilicity, hydrogen-bonding potentials, melting points, heats of fusion, and
solubilities in select solvents, (3) to measure the naltrexone prodrugs' penetration and concurrent metabolism
through human skin in vitro, (4) to characterize the pharmacokinetics of the naltrexone prodrugs in guinea
pigs in vivo, and (5) to characterize the pharmacokinetics of the most promising naltrexone prodrugs in pigs
in vivo.
Correlation of our in vitro data with the in vivo models will aid in the creation of a reliable QSPR database,
as well as help to identify the most promising prodrug for eventual human use.
Status | Finished |
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Effective start/end date | 4/1/04 → 3/31/06 |
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