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Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of sildenafil in fetal lambs on extracorporeal support - 09/10/21

Doi : 10.1016/j.biopha.2021.112161 
Felix R. De Bie a, b, , Francesca M. Russo a, Pieter Van Brantegem c, Barbara E. Coons a, James K. Moon a, Zexuan Yang a, Chengcheng Pang a, Janaina C. Senra a, Camilla Omann a, Pieter Annaert c, Karel Allegaert b, c, d, Marcus G. Davey a, Alan W. Flake a, Jan Deprest b
a Center for Fetal Research, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, United States 
b MyFetUZ, Department of Development and Regeneration, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium 
c Department of Pharmaceutical and Pharmacological Sciences, KU Leuven, Belgium 
d Department of Hospital Pharmacy, Erasmus MC University Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands 

Correspondence to: 3615 Civic Center Blvd, Suite 1114F, 19104 Philadelphia, PA, United States.3615 Civic Center Blvd, Suite 1114FPhiladelphiaPA19104United States

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Abstract

Background

Maternal transplacental administration of sildenafil is being considered for a variety of fetal conditions. Clinical translation also requires evaluation of fetal safety in a higher species, such as the fetal lamb. Experiments with the pregnant ewe are curtailed by minimal transplacental transfer as well as limited access to the fetus. The EXTra-uterine Environment for Neonatal Development (EXTEND) model renders the isolated fetal lamb readily accessible and allows for direct fetal administration of sildenafil.

Methods

Five fetal lambs were placed on extracorporeal support in the EXTEND device and received continuous intravenous (IV) sildenafil (0.3–0.5–0.7 mg/kg/24hr) for a duration of one to seven days. Plasma sildenafil concentrations were sampled at regular intervals to establish the pharmacokinetic profile using population pharmacokinetic modeling. Serial Doppler ultrasound examination, continuous non-invasive hemodynamic monitoring and blood gas analysis were done to evaluate the pharmacodynamic effects and fetal response.

Findings

The target concentration range (47–500 ng/mL) was attained with all doses. Sildenafil induced an immediate and temporary reduction of pulmonary vascular resistance, mean arterial pressure and circuit flow, without change in fetal lactate levels and acid-base status. The duration of the systemic effects increased with the dose.

Interpretation

Immediate temporary pulmonary vascular and systemic hemodynamic changes induced by sildenafil were biochemically well tolerated by fetal lambs on extracorporeal support, with the 0.5 mg/kg/24 h dose balancing rapid attainment of target concentrations with short-lived systemic effects.

Research in context

None.

Search strategy before undertaking the study

A literature review was conducted searching online databases (Medline, Embase and Cochrane), using search terms: fetal OR prenatal OR antenatal AND sildenafil, without time-limit and excluding human studies. Where relevant, investigators were contacted in order to avoid duplication of work.

Evidence before this study

Prenatal therapy with sildenafil, a phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitor with vasodilatory and anti-remodeling effects on vascular smooth muscle cells, has been considered for a variety of fetal conditions. One multicenter clinical trial investigating the benefit of sildenafil in severe intrauterine growth restriction (the STRIDER-trial) was halted early due to excess mortality in the sildenafil-exposed arm at one treatment site. Such findings demonstrate the importance of extensive preclinical safety assessment in relevant animal models. Transplacentally administered sildenafil leads to decreased pulmonary arterial muscularization, preventing or reducing the occurrence of pulmonary hypertension in rat and rabbit fetuses with diaphragmatic hernia (DH). Validation of these results in a higher and relevant animal model, e.g. fetal lambs, is the next step to advance clinical translation. We recently demonstrated that, in contrast to humans, transplacental transfer of sildenafil in sheep is minimal, precluding the in vivo study of fetal effects at target concentrations using the conventional pregnant ewe model.

Added value of this study

We therefore used the extracorporeal support model for fetal lambs, referred to as the EXTra-uterine Environment for Neonatal Development (EXTEND) system, bypassing placental and maternal metabolism, to investigate at what dose the target concentrations are reached, and what the fetal hemodynamic impact and response are. Fetal hemodynamic and metabolic tolerance to sildenafil are a crucial missing element on the road to clinical translation. This is therefore the first study investigating the pharmacokinetics, hemodynamic and biochemical effects of clinical-range concentrations of sildenafil in fetal lambs, free from placental and maternal interference.

Implications of all the available evidence

We demonstrated self-limiting pulmonary vasodilation, a decrease of both systemic arterial pressures and circuit flows, induced by clinical range concentrations of sildenafil, without the development of fetal acidosis. This paves the way for further investigation of prenatal sildenafil in fetal lambs on extracorporeal support. A dose of 0.5 mg/kg/24 h offered the best trade-off between rapid achievement of target concentrations and shortest duration of systemic effects. This is also the first study using the EXTEND as a model for pharmacotherapy during pregnancy.

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Graphical Abstract




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Highlights

Sildenafil was investigated in isolated fetal lambs on extracorporeal support.
Relevant concentrations of sildenafil could be measured.
Sildenafil caused an immediate and temporary pulmonary vasodilation.
Sildenafil was biochemically well-tolerated by the fetal lambs.

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Keywords : Sildenafil citrate, Fetal therapies, Fetal lamb, Extracorporeal circulation


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