Abstract

An intramuscular (IM) suspension of benzathine penicillin G (BPG) has been used as first-line therapy for the treatment of syphilis worldwide since its approval in the 1950s. However, there are limited reports about the pharmacokinetics of BPG. A Phase 1 study was conducted on eight Japanese healthy participants to investigate the pharmacokinetics (samples collected predose to 648 h post-dose) and safety of 2.4 million units of BPG after a single IM injection. Following administration, penicillin G, the active moiety of BPG, was absorbed slowly from the injection site with a median time to Cmax (tmax) of 48 h post-dose. After the achievement of Cmax, concentrations of penicillin G declined slowly in a monophasic fashion with a mean apparent terminal half-life of 189 h. Geometric mean AUCinf and Cmax were 50770 ng•h/mL and 259 ng/mL, respectively. Median time (range) above the well-accepted therapeutic concentration (18 ng/mL) for syphilis treatment was 561 h (439-608 h [18-25 days]), which reached and exceeded the necessary duration of 7-10 days for syphilis treatment. Two participants were underdosed with residual drug left in the syringe due to the high viscosity of the drug product. Only one (12.5%) participant reported a mild adverse event of nasopharyngitis, which was considered not related to the study treatment. The study results supported BPG approval in Japan as an option for syphilis treatment.

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