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result(s) for
"Goodey, Adrian"
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Laboratory Performance Testing of Aqueous Nasal Inhalation Products for Droplet/Particle Size Distribution: an Assessment from the International Pharmaceutical Aerosol Consortium on Regulation and Science (IPAC-RS)
by
Copley, Mark
,
Goodey, Adrian P.
,
Doub, William H.
in
Biochemistry
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Biomedicine
2023
Although nasal inhalation products are becoming more and more important for the delivery of medicines, characterization of these products for quality control and assessment of bioequivalence is complicated. Most of the problems encountered are associated with the assessment of aerodynamic droplet/particle size distribution (APSD). The droplets produced by the various nasal devices are large, and for suspension products, individual droplets may contain multiple drug particles or none at all. Assessment of suspension products is further complicated by the presence of solid excipient particles. These complications make it imperative that the limitations of the instruments used for characterization as well as the underlying assumptions that govern the interpretation of data produced by these instruments are understood. In this paper, we describe various methodologies used to assess APSD for nasal inhalation products and discuss proper use, limitations, and new methodologies on the horizon.
Journal Article
A Microchip CD4 Counting Method for HIV Monitoring in Resource-Poor Settings
by
McDevitt, John T
,
Rodriguez, William R
,
Mohanty, Sanghamitra
in
Algorithms
,
Antiretroviral drugs
,
Bioengineering
2005
More than 35 million people in developing countries are living with HIV infection. An enormous global effort is now underway to bring antiretroviral treatment to at least 3 million of those infected. While drug prices have dropped considerably, the cost and technical complexity of laboratory tests essential for the management of HIV disease, such as CD4 cell counts, remain prohibitive. New, simple, and affordable methods for measuring CD4 cells that can be implemented in resource-scarce settings are urgently needed.
Here we describe the development of a prototype for a simple, rapid, and affordable method for counting CD4 lymphocytes. Microliter volumes of blood without further sample preparation are stained with fluorescent antibodies, captured on a membrane within a miniaturized flow cell and imaged through microscope optics with the type of charge-coupled device developed for digital camera technology. An associated computer algorithm converts the raw digital image into absolute CD4 counts and CD4 percentages in real time. The accuracy of this prototype system was validated through testing in the United States and Botswana, and showed close agreement with standard flow cytometry (r = 0.95) over a range of absolute CD4 counts, and the ability to discriminate clinically relevant CD4 count thresholds with high sensitivity and specificity.
Advances in the adaptation of new technologies to biomedical detection systems, such as the one described here, promise to make complex diagnostics for HIV and other infectious diseases a practical global reality.
Journal Article
Rapid Absorption of Dry-Powder Intranasal Oxytocin
by
Lee, Dinah
,
Haruta, Shunji
,
Goodey, Adrian
in
Administration, Intranasal
,
Animals
,
Biochemistry
2016
Purpose
To probe the suitability of a dry-powder oxytocin formulation containing a carrier (μco™; SNBL, Ltd.) for intranasal (IN) administration to treat post-partum hemorrhage in the developing world. Specifically, to investigate (
1
) whether IN administration can achieve rapid systemic absorption in cynomolgus monkeys, and (
2
) whether the formulation exhibits sufficient physical and chemical stability. This study was conducted to support
Merck for Mothers
, Merck’s 10-year global initiative to end preventable maternal deaths.
Methods
A partial-crossover pharmacokinetic (PK) study in cynomolgus monkeys (
n
= 6) was utilized to compare
in vivo
absorption of dry-powder IN oxytocin at three dose levels against an IM injection of an aqueous oxytocin formulation. Particle size distribution, delivered dose and chemical assay were monitored over a 12 month stability study.
Results
IN administration of oxytocin resulted in short (5 min) T
max
and good dose linearity in AUC and C
max
over the dose range tested (10–80 IU per animal). The relative bioavailability (BA) of IN oxytocin to IM injection was approximately 12%. The 80 IU formulation exhibited good physical stability and consistent dosing. After 12 months at 30°C/65%RH, pouched samples retained 86.0% of their original assay value.
Conclusions
The PK and stability data suggests that IN administration of oxytocin formulated in the μco™ carrier may represent a viable option for rapid systemic absorption in humans and a product compatible with resource-scarce regions.
Journal Article
Using Dry Dispersion Laser Diffraction to Assess Dispersibility in Spheronized Agglomerate Formulations
by
Brunskill, Andrew
,
Goodey, Adrian
,
Arevalo, Faustin
in
Biochemistry
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Biomedicine
2024
In this study, dry dispersion laser diffraction was used to study the dispersibility of spheronized agglomerate formulations and identify geometric particle size metrics that correlated well with aerodynamic particle size distribution (APSD). Eleven unique batches of agglomerates were prepared for both laser diffraction and cascade impaction testing. Correlations between the particle size distribution (PSD) and aerodynamic particle size distribution (APSD) metrics for the eleven agglomerate batches were determined in a semi-empirical manner. The strongest correlation between APSD and PSD was observed between the impactor-sized mass (%ISM) and the cumulative PSD fraction <14.5 µm. The strongest correlation with fine particle fraction (FPF) was observed with the cumulative PSD fraction <0.99 micron (
R
-squared = 0.974). In contrast to the other APSD metrics, good correlations were not found between the mass median aerodynamic diameter (MMAD) and the cumulative PSD fractions. Overall, the implementation of laser diffraction as a surrogate for cascade impaction has the potential to streamline product development. Laser diffraction measurements offer savings in labor and turnaround time compared to cascade impaction.
Graphical Abstract
Journal Article
Safety and pharmacokinetics of islatravir subdermal implant for HIV-1 pre-exposure prophylaxis: a randomized, placebo-controlled phase 1 trial
by
Iwamoto, Marian
,
Zhang, Saijuan
,
Patel, Munjal
in
631/250/255/1901
,
692/308/153
,
692/699/255/1901
2021
Islatravir (MK-8591) is a highly potent type 1 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) nucleoside reverse transcriptase translocation inhibitor with a long intracellular half-life that is in development for the prevention and treatment of HIV-1. We conducted a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 1 trial in adults without HIV-1 infection. Participants received islatravir or placebo subdermal implants for 12 weeks and were monitored throughout this period and after implant removal. The co-primary end points were safety and tolerability of the islatravir implant and pharmacokinetics, including concentration at day 85, of islatravir triphosphate in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). Secondary end points included additional pharmacokinetic parameters for islatravir triphosphate in PBMCs and the plasma pharmacokinetic profile of islatravir. Based on preclinical data, two doses were assessed: 54 mg (
n
= 8, two placebo) and 62 mg (
n
= 8, two placebo). The most frequently reported adverse events were mild-to-moderate implant-site reactions (induration, hematoma, pain). Throughout the 12-week trial, geometric mean islatravir triphosphate concentrations were above a pharmacokinetic threshold of 0.05 pmol per 10
6
PBMCs, which was estimated to provide therapeutic reverse transcriptase inhibition (concentration at day 85 (percentage of geometric coefficient of variation): 54 mg, 0.135 pmol per 10
6
cells (27.3); 62 mg, 0.272 pmol per 10
6
cells (45.2)). Islatravir implants at both doses were safe and resulted in mean concentrations above the pharmacokinetic threshold through 12 weeks, warranting further investigation of islatravir implants as a potential HIV prevention strategy.
A subdermal implant of the HIV-1 antiretroviral islatravir delivers sustained drug release over 12 weeks in humans.
Journal Article
A microchip CD4 counting method for HIV monitoring in resource-poor settings
2005
BACKGROUND: More than 35 million people in developing countries are living with HIV infection. An enormous global effort is now underway to bring antiretroviral treatment to at least 3 million of those infected. While drug prices have dropped considerably, the cost and technical complexity of laboratory tests essential for the management of HIV disease, such as CD4 cell counts, remain prohibitive. New, simple, and affordable methods for measuring CD4 cells that can be implemented in resource-scarce settings are urgently needed. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Here we describe the development of a prototype for a simple, rapid, and affordable method for counting CD4 lymphocytes. Microliter volumes of blood without further sample preparation are stained with fluorescent antibodies, captured on a membrane within a miniaturized flow cell and imaged through microscope optics with the type of charge-coupled device developed for digital camera technology. An associated computer algorithm converts the raw digital image into absolute CD4 counts and CD4 percentages in real time. The accuracy of this prototype system was validated through testing in the United States and Botswana, and showed close agreement with standard flow cytometry (r = 0.95) over a range of absolute CD4 counts, and the ability to discriminate clinically relevant CD4 count thresholds with high sensitivity and specificity. CONCLUSION: Advances in the adaptation of new technologies to biomedical detection systems, such as the one described here, promise to make complex diagnostics for HIV and other infectious diseases a practical global reality.
Journal Article