Drug delivery to the posterior eye segment is an important challenge in ophthalmology, because many diseases affect the retina and choroid leading to impaired vision or blindness. Currently, intravitreal injections are the method of choice to administer drugs to the retina, but this approach is applicable only in selected cases (e.g. anti-VEGF antibodies and soluble receptors). There are two basic approaches that can be adopted to improve retinal drug delivery: prolonged and/or retina targeted delivery of intravitreal drugs and use of other routes of drug administration, such as periocular, suprachoroidal, sub-retinal, systemic, or topical. Properties of the administration route, drug and delivery system determine the efficacy and safety of these approaches. Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic factors determine the required dosing rates and doses that are needed for drug action. In addition, tolerability factors limit the use of many materials in ocular drug delivery. This review article provides a critical discussion of retinal drug delivery, particularly from the pharmacokinetic point of view. This article does not include an extensive review of drug delivery technologies, because they have already been reviewed several times recently. Instead, we aim to provide a systematic and quantitative view on the pharmacokinetic factors in drug delivery to the posterior eye segment. This review is based on the literature and unpublished data from the authors' laboratory.
Pharmacokinetic aspects of retinal drug delivery.
Eva M. del Amo Paez,A. Rimpelä,Emma M. Heikkinen,Otto K. Kari,Eva Ramsay,Tatu Lajunen,M. Schmitt,Laura Pelkonen,Madhushree Bhattacharya,D. Richardson,A. Subrizi,T. Turunen,M. Reinisalo,Jaakko Itkonen,Elisa Toropainen,Marco G. Casteleijn,H. Kidron,M. Antopolsky,Kati-Sisko Vellonen,Marika Ruponen,A. Urtti
Published 2017 in Progress in retinal and eye research
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2017
- Venue
Progress in retinal and eye research
- Publication date
2017-03-01
- Fields of study
Medicine
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
CITATION MAP
EXTRACTION MAP
CLAIMS
- No claims are published for this paper.
CONCEPTS
- No concepts are published for this paper.