Vaginal drug distribution modeling.
This review presents and applies fundamental mass transport theory describing the diffusion and convection driven mass transport of drugs to the vaginal environment. It considers sources of variability in the predictions of the models. It illustrates use of model predictions of microbicide drug concentration distribution (pharmacokinetics) to gain insights about drug effectiveness in preventing HIV infection (pharmacodynamics). The modeling compares vaginal drug distributions after different gel dosage regimens, and it evaluates consequences of changes in gel viscosity due to aging. It compares vaginal mucosal concentration distributions of drugs delivered by gels vs. intravaginal rings. Finally, the modeling approach is used to compare vaginal drug distributions across species with differing vaginal dimensions. Deterministic models of drug mass transport into and throughout the vaginal environment can provide critical insights about the mechanisms and determinants of such transport. This knowledge, and the methodology that obtains it, can be applied and translated to multiple applications, involving the scientific underpinnings of vaginal drug distribution and the performance evaluation and design of products, and their dosage regimens, that achieve it.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Viscosity
- Vaginal Creams, Foams, and Jellies
- Vaginal Absorption
- Vagina
- Pharmacology & Pharmacy
- Models, Biological
- Humans
- HIV Infections
- Female
- Drug Stability
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Viscosity
- Vaginal Creams, Foams, and Jellies
- Vaginal Absorption
- Vagina
- Pharmacology & Pharmacy
- Models, Biological
- Humans
- HIV Infections
- Female
- Drug Stability