Abstract

Vaginal tablets are being developed as an alternative to gels as an inexpensive, discreet dosage form for the administration of microbicides. This work describes the pharmacokinetic (PK) evaluation of rapidly disintegrating vaginal tablets containing tenofovir (TFV, 10 mg), emtricitabine (FTC, 10 mg), and the combination of TFV and FTC (10 mg each) under in vitro and in vivo conditions, and in direct comparison to the clinical TFV 1% gel, a microbicide product in Phase III clinical testing. The PK of TFV and FTC from tablets were also evaluated in female rabbits following intravaginal administration. Direct comparison of a single dose of TFV tablets (intact or predissolved at 10 mg/mL) and TFV 1% gel showed no differences in the vaginal PK of TFV between groups; however systemic bioavailability of TFV was significantly higher from the gel. When rabbits were dosed either once or daily for seven days with intact tablets of TFV, FTC, or the combination of TFV/FTC, vaginal and systemic concentrations of TFV and FTC were unaffected by co-formulation. Moreover, plasma PK parameters were similar following a single dose or seven once-daily doses. Tissue concentrations of TFV and FTC in the cranial vagina 4 h after administration ranged between 104 and 105 ng/g. Concentrations of TFV-diphospate (TFV-DP, the active metabolite) were also high (over 103 ng/g or about 3000 to 6000 fmol/mg) in the cranial vagina 4 h after administration and similar to those measured following administration of TFV 1% gel. These data demonstrate that rapidly disintegrating vaginal tablets may be a suitable topical microbicide dosage form providing similar vaginal TFV PK to that of TFV 1% gel. The data also support co-administration of FTC with TFV in a single vaginal tablet to create a combination microbicide in a simple and inexpensive dosage form.

Highlights

  • As women in sub-Saharan Africa and other developing world regions continue to be disproportionally affected by the HIV pandemic [1,2], there remains a compelling need to develop acceptable and effective woman-initiated microbicide products

  • While TFV gel and other vaginal gels are generally accepted by women, gel leakage is a common observation that may reduce a women’s desire to use the product and the amount of drug available at the sites of HIV-1 transmission

  • Poor adherence in particular continues to be a major challenge to the microbicides and oral HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis fields, as it has been linked to the inability to demonstrate efficacy in several clinical studies, including for the once-daily use of TFV gel [4,5]

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Summary

Introduction

As women in sub-Saharan Africa and other developing world regions continue to be disproportionally affected by the HIV pandemic [1,2], there remains a compelling need to develop acceptable and effective woman-initiated microbicide products. In the CAPRISA 004 Phase IIb clinical trial, tenofovir (TFV) 1% gel became the first, and currently only, vaginal microbicide to demonstrate prophylactic efficacy against HIV acquisition [3]. While TFV gel and other vaginal gels are generally accepted by women, gel leakage is a common observation that may reduce a women’s desire to use the product and the amount of drug available at the sites of HIV-1 transmission. Both of these issues have the potential to reduce overall effectiveness of a microbicide product. Poor adherence in particular continues to be a major challenge to the microbicides and oral HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis fields, as it has been linked to the inability to demonstrate efficacy in several clinical studies, including for the once-daily use of TFV gel [4,5]

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