Investigation on the Effect of Capillary Microsampling on Hematologic and Toxicokinetic Evaluation in Regulatory Safety Studies in Mice

This study evaluated the feasibility of implementation of capillary microsampling (CMS) in a single-dose study in mice with the ultimate goal of enabling its use in toxicology studies. The focus was on the impact of microsampling on toxicokinetic assessment and on the subsequent hematology assessment in the same animal. A seventy (70)- μL blood collection via CMS from the tail vein had a minimal effect on the hematology parameters of mice (strain C57BL/6) in samples taken within 24 h of blood collection. TK parameters were similar in plasma samples collected via CMS and cardiac puncture sampling. A bioanalytical assay was develo ped which enabled the quantification of concentration of both the parent drug and a metabolite using only 5-μL plasma sample per analysis. Incurred sample reanalysis (ISR), unexpected event investigation, and re-assay were successfully performed on the limited samples (≤ 20 μL) collected from CMS. The results of this study confirmed the feasibility of implementing CMS in regulated mouse toxicity studies and demonstrated that it is possible to eliminate or reduce satellite animals.
Source: The AAPS Journal - Category: Drugs & Pharmacology Source Type: research