Pharmacokinetics of fluralaner in dogs following a single oral or intravenous administration

Background Fluralaner is a novel systemic insecticide and acaricide. The purpose of these studies was to investigate the pharmacokinetic properties of fluralaner in Beagle dogs following single oral or intravenous (i.v.) administration. Methods Following the oral administration of 12.5, 25 or 50 mg fluralaner/kg body weight (BW), formulated as chewable tablets or i.v. administration of 12.5 mg fluralaner/kg BW, formulated as i.v. solution to 24 Beagles, plasma samples were collected until 112 days after treatment. Plasma concentrations of fluralaner were measured using HPLC-MS/MS. Pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated by non-compartmental methods. Results After oral administration, maximum plasma concentrations (Cmax) were reached within 1 day on average. Fluralaner was quantifiable in plasma for up to 112 days after single oral and i.v. treatment. The apparent half-life of fluralaner was 12–15 days and the mean residence time was 15–20 days. The apparent volume of distribution of fluralaner was 3.1 L/kg, and clearance was 0.14 L/kg/day. Conclusions Fluralaner is readily absorbed after single-dose oral administration, and has a long elimination half-life, long mean residence time, relatively high apparent volume of distribution, and low clearance. These pharmacokinetic characteristics help to explain the prolonged activity of fluralaner against fleas and ticks on dogs after a single oral dose.


Background
Fluralaner is a novel systemic insecticide and acaricide formulated as a chewable oral tablet that can be administered to dogs at 12 week intervals for effective persistent killing of a number of flea and tick species of dogs [1,2].
Fluralaner belongs to a new class of chemicals with an isoxazoline structure as an essential feature [2,3]. It has a molecular weight of 556.29, a log P ow (octanol/water partition co-efficient) of 5.35 and is highly bound to plasma proteins.
Fluralaner is a potent inhibitor of ligand gated chloride channels (γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-and L-glutamategated chloride channels) in neurons with significant selectivity for arthropod neurons over mammalian neurons [2,3]. In vivo investigations have shown that after a single oral administration to dogs, fluralaner provides persistent flea and tick killing activity for 12 weeks [1]. Fluralaner is an innovative, highly effective, and long-lasting ectoparasite treatment for dogs.

Methods
Chewable tablets containing 13.64% (w/w) fluralaner were formulated for oral administration to dogs. Test material for i.v. administration was formulated as solution with 2.5 mg fluralaner /mL in a Polyethylene glycol (PEG) 200 (90% v/v) vehicle containing 10% v/v water for injection.
Healthy male and female Beagle dogs were kept indoors in pens with sealed floors and individually housed until 5 or 6 weeks after fluralaner administration (oral or i.v.) to avoid potential cross contamination between animals. Thereafter, dogs were housed in groups of 3 of the same treatment group and sex. Room environment was monitored continuously, with a temperature of 15-21°C, relative humidity of 40-70%, 10-20 air changes per hour and a 12-hour fluorescent light/12-hour dark cycle. Dogs were fed once daily in the morning with a standard dog diet and had ad libitum access to water. On the day of oral fluralaner administration, the dogs received one-half of their daily food ration shortly before treatment and the remainder immediately after treatment, because administration of chewable tablets containing fluralaner with food increases its bioavailability [4].
To determine the rate and extent of systemic exposure after oral administration and oral dose proportionality, a parallel-group study was conducted with 3 treatment groups. Dogs received either 12.5, 25, or 50 mg (target dose) fluralaner/kg BW orally, with the mid dose (25 mg/kg BW) based on the minimum recommended treatment dose [1]. Additional pharmacokinetic parameters such as total body clearance and volume of distribution were determined in a separate study involving 6 Beagles administered 12.5 mg fluralaner/kg BW by slow i.v. infusion. All dose rates in the following sections are expressed in mg fluralaner per kg BW.
In both studies, dogs were randomized to treatment groups (3 dogs per sex per group), within sex, and blocked by body weight to ensure a balanced distribution. Both studies were compliant with the principles of Good Laboratory Practice [5]. The animal work was conducted in compliance with respective national legislation and approved by Animal Experimentation Ethics Committee at Harlan Laboratories S.A.
Individual oral doses were determined on the basis of individual body weights and the nominal content of fluralaner in the tablets. Dogs received whole tablets using either individual 112.5 mg, 250 mg or 500 mg fluralaner tablets, or a combination of tablets to achieve a dose close to the calculated target dose. Oral dosing was facilitated by placing the calculated target dose on the back of the dog's tongue. Intravenous injection dose volumes were determined on the basis of individual body weights and were administered as a constant rate infusion over 5 minutes using an automatic injection system (KDS Model 200, KD Scientific Inc., Holliston, USA). The injection rate per hour was approximately 12 times the respective dose volume to ensure complete administration within 5 minutes.
Plasma samples were extracted by protein precipitation with acetonitrile and diluted with 0.1% formic acid. The resultant solution was analyzed quantitatively using automated solid phase extraction coupled to liquid chromatography with mass spectrometric detection (online SPE-HPLC-MS/MS). The linear range of the method for determination of fluralaner was 10.0 to 2500 ng/mL, with a lower limit of quantification (LLOQ) of 10.0 ng/mL. Pharmacokinetic parameters for fluralaner were calculated using non-compartmental methods with the validated software WinNonlin® Professional Version 5.3 (Pharsight Corporation, California, USA). The peak plasma concentration (C max ) and time to peak concentration (t max ) were observed values. The elimination half-life (t 1/2 ) was calculated by linear regression using the slope of the terminal segment of the semilogarithmic plasma concentration versus time curve. The area under the concentration versus time curve (AUC) from time 0 to the last measurable concentration (AUC (0→t) ) was calculated using the linear trapezoidal rule. The AUC from time 0 extrapolated to infinity (AUC (0→∞) ) was determined as AUC (0→ t) + C t /λ z , where C t is the plasma concentration at time t and λ z is the first order rate constant associated with the terminal (log-linear) portion of the curve. The apparent volume of distribution (V z ) after i.v. administration, based on the terminal phase was calculated as Dose/λ z × AUC. Total body clearance (Cl) after i.v. administration was calculated as Dose/AUC. Bioavailability (F%) via the oral route was calculated using mean AUC (0→∞) as (AUC (0→∞) oral /AUC (0→∞) iv ) × (Dose iv / Dose oral ) × 100. Mean residence time (MRT) extrapolated to infinity was calculated as the ratio of AUMC/AUC; where AUMC is the area under the first moment curve. Dose proportionality was tested for exposure parameters C max and AUC (0→t). For this purpose dose-normalized (nominal dose) values were analyzed using an appropriate analysis of variance (ANOVA) regression model. The tests were two-sided at the 0.05 level of significance. All data are expressed as arithmetic mean ± SD unless otherwise stated.

Results and discussion
Each of three groups of six dogs (age 1-2 years; weight 7.8-11.4 kg) was administered fluralaner orally at one of three target doses (12.5, 25, or 50 mg/kg). The doses were achieved using whole tablets, and therefore each dog received a dose around the target dose. This was a range of 12.0-14.6 mg/kg for a target dose of 12.5 mg/kg, 25.0-28.8 mg/kg for a target dose of 25 mg/kg, and 42.2-53.2 mg/kg for a target dose of 50 mg/kg.
No dog showed any clinical finding or adverse event after oral fluralaner administration.
Plasma concentrations of fluralaner reached C max within 1 day after administration on average, and progressively declined over time, with some lower secondary peaks, which may indicate redistribution or recirculation e.g. enterohepatic re-circulation. There was a dose-dependent increase in mean peak plasma concentrations. The terminal portion of the plasma concentration versus time curves followed an almost parallel course; in the lower two dose groups at the same concentration with high inter-individual variability, and in the high dose group at a higher concentration with lower inter-individual variability. Fluralaner could be quantified in plasma (> 10 ng/mL) for up to 112 days after treatment, demonstrating a long systemic persistence (Figure 1).
In the i.v. (12.5 mg/kg) group very slow elimination of fluralaner was observed after the 5-minute infusion. In all dogs, plasma concentrations of fluralaner declined as a function of time, with some secondary peaks, which may indicate redistribution or recirculation e.g. enterohepatic re-circulation. Fluralaner could be quantified in plasma for up to 112 days post administration, demonstrating a long systemic persistence after i.v. administration to dogs (Figure 2).
The non-compartmental pharmacokinetic parameters calculated from the concentration-time data of fluralaner are shown in Table 1.
The mean total plasma clearance of fluralaner was 0.14 L/kg/day and the mean apparent volume of distribution of fluralaner was 3.1 L/kg following i.v. infusion.
The mean half-life (15 days) and mean residence time (20 days) values suggest a slow elimination process following i.v. infusion. These parameters were similar to values determined after oral administration at different dose rates, indicating that the elimination kinetic appears to be independent of dose and administration route.
As only unbound drugs in the vascular system are available to clearing organs for elimination, apparent volume of distribution and clearance are determinants of the terminal half-life [7][8][9]. Taking into account the total body water volume (approximately 0.6 L/kg) of a dog [6], fluralaner has a relatively high apparent distribution (V z = 3.1 L/kg) into tissues following i.v. infusion, despite its high level of binding to plasma proteins.
For fluralaner, it is assumed that the main route of elimination is likely hepatic, because the high plasma protein binding suggests that elimination via renal filtration is minor; therefore, plasma clearance can be assumed to be equivalent to hepatic clearance. Considering a physiological hepatic blood flow in the dog of approximately 44.5 L/kg/day [6,7] and hepatic clearance of fluralaner of 0.14 L/kg/day, the hepatic extraction ratio is estimated to be low (0.3%). The low clearance, together with the relatively high distribution to The bioavailability of the oral formulation is slightly higher at lower oral doses (34 ± 16%, 26 ± 11%, and 20 ± 8%, for 12.5, 25 and 50 mg/kg, respectively).
However, there was no statistically significant differences between dose groups in dose-normalized exposure parameters AUC (0→t) and C max (ANOVA, p = 0.165 for AUC (0→t) and p = 0.206 for C max ), indicating no evidence against the null hypothesis of fluralaner dose proportionality over the dose range 12.5 mg/kg to 50 mg/kg.

Conclusions
Fluralaner is readily absorbed after single-dose oral administration, and has a long elimination half-life, long mean residence time, relatively high apparent volume of distribution, and low clearance. These pharmacokinetic characteristics help to explain the prolonged activity of fluralaner against fleas and ticks on dogs after a single oral dose.

Compliance statement
This study was conducted in Spain after obtaining the authorization of the relevant regulatory authorities. Cl (L/kg/day) n/a n/a n/a 0.14 ± 0.02 V z (L/kg) n/a n/a n/a 3.1 ± 0.5 a Median, other values are mean ± standard deviation. n/a -not applicable.