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Search: WFRF:(de Waal Tom) > (2022)

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1.
  • de Waal, Tom, et al. (author)
  • The impact of inflammation on the expression of drug transporters and metabolic enzymes in colonic tissue from ulcerative colitis patients
  • 2022
  • In: International Journal of Pharmaceutics. - : Elsevier. - 0378-5173 .- 1873-3476. ; 628
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The intestinal tract forms an important barrier against xenobiotics while allowing nutrients to pass. In ulcerative colitis (UC), a chronic inflammatory bowel disease, this barrier function is impaired leading to an abnormal immune response and inflammation of the colonic mucosa. Transporter proteins and metabolic enzymes are an integral part of the protective barrier in the gut and play an important role in the disposition of nutrients, toxins and oral drugs. In this study, the protein expression of 13 transporters and 13 enzymes was determined in the sigmoid and rectum of UC patients in endoscopic remission and during active inflammation. In inflamed con-ditions (endoscopic Mayo sub-score 1, 2 or 3), a significant decrease (q < 0.05) was observed in the median expression of the transporters P-gp (0.046 vs 0.529 fmol/mu g protein), MRP4 (0.003 vs 0.023 fmol/mu g protein) and MCT1 (0.287 vs 1.090 fmol/mu g protein), and the enzymes CYP3A5 (0.031 vs 0.046 fmol/mu g protein) and UGT2B7 (0.083 vs 0.176 fmol/mu g protein). Moreover, during severe inflammation, the decrease was even more pro-nounced. Expression levels of other proteins were not altered during inflammation (e.g., OATP2B1, CYP3A4, CYP2B6 and UGT2B15). The results suggest a decreased transport and metabolism of xenobiotics in the colon of UC patients during active inflammation potentially altering local drug concentrations and thus treatment outcome.
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2.
  • Wilson, Clive G., et al. (author)
  • Integration of advanced methods and models to study drug absorption and related processes : An UNGAP perspective.
  • 2022
  • In: European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences. - : Elsevier BV. - 0928-0987 .- 1879-0720. ; 172
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • This collection of contributions from the European Network on Understanding Gastrointestinal Absorption-related Processes (UNGAP) community assembly aims to provide information on some of the current and newer methods employed to study the behaviour of medicines. It is the product of interactions in the immediate pre-Covid period when UNGAP members were able to meet and set up workshops and to discuss progress across the disciplines. UNGAP activities are divided into work packages that cover special treatment populations, absorption processes in different regions of the gut, the development of advanced formulations and the integration of food and pharmaceutical scientists in the food-drug interface. This involves both new and established technical approaches in which we have attempted to define best practice and highlight areas where further research is needed. Over the last months we have been able to reflect on some of the key innovative approaches which we were tasked with mapping, including theoretical, in silico, in vitro, in vivo and ex vivo, preclinical and clinical approaches. This is the product of some of us in a snapshot of where UNGAP has travelled and what aspects of innovative technologies are important. It is not a comprehensive review of all methods used in research to study drug dissolution and absorption, but provides an ample panorama of current and advanced methods generally and potentially useful in this area.This collection starts from a consideration of advances in a priori approaches: an understanding of the molecular properties of the compound to predict biological characteristics relevant to absorption. The next four sections discuss a major activity in the UNGAP initiative, the pursuit of more representative conditions to study lumenal dissolution of drug formulations developed independently by academic teams. They are important because they illustrate examples of in vitro simulation systems that have begun to provide a useful understanding of formulation behaviour in the upper GI tract for industry. The Leuven team highlights the importance of the physiology of the digestive tract, as they describe the relevance of gastric and intestinal fluids on the behaviour of drugs along the tract. This provides the introduction to microdosing as an early tool to study drug disposition. Microdosing in oncology is starting to use gamma-emitting tracers, which provides a link through SPECT to the next section on nuclear medicine. The last two papers link the modelling approaches used by the pharmaceutical industry, in silico to Pop-PK linking to Darwich and Aarons, who provide discussion on pharmacometric modelling, completing the loop of molecule to man.
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