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© 1990 Oxford University Press

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Comparison of in vitro and In vivo Models to Assess Venous Irritation of Parenteral Antibiotics

D. M. HOOVER1, J. B. GARDNER, T. L. TIMMERMAN, J. A. KLEPFER, D. A. LASKA, S. L. WHITE, J. P. MCGRATH, M. K. BUENING and P. D. WILLIAMS

Toxicology Division, Lilly Research Laboratories Greenfield, Indiana 46140

Received April 27, 1989; accepted November 9, 1989

Comparison of in vitro and In vivo Models to Assess Venous Irritation of Parenteral Antibiotics. HOOVER, D. M., GARDNER, J. B., TIMMERMAN, T. L., KLEPFER, J. A., LASKA, D. A., WHITE, S. L., MCGRATH, J. P., BUENING, M. K., AND WILLIAMS, P. D. (1990). Fundam. Appl. Toxicol. 14, 589–597. The venous irritation potential of four parenteral antibiotics, tetracycline hydrochloride (TET), erythromycin lactobionate (ERY), amphotericin B (AMP), and cephalori-dine (CEP), was evaluated in an In vivo model using the rabbit ear vein. Lateral ear veins of New Zealand White rabbits were infused for 1 hr with test solutions containing TET (0.25, 2.5, or 10 mg/ml), ERY (2.5, 5, or 25 mg/ml), AMP (0.05, 0.1, or 0.5 mg/ml), or CEP (4 or 20 mg/ml). Control rabbits received comparable volumes of 0.9% NaCl or 5% dextrose. Approximately 24 hr postinfusion, the rabbits were evaluated for visually evident changes in the treated ears. Pathologic evaluation of the veins was performed using histologic sections and scanning electron microscopy. TET, ERY, and AMP caused concentration-dependent changes in veins characterized primarily by loss of endothelium with associated inflammation and thrombus formation, consistent with the known clinical irritancy of these antibiotics. CEP, on the other hand, was well tolerated in the rabbit ear vein, paralleling its low irritancy potential in man. Test solutions identical to those used In vivo in rabbits were also evaluated in established in vitro assays for hemolytic potential when mixed with whole blood from monkeys and for damage to L6 muscle cells as determined by loss of creatine phosphokinase. Results of the in vitro test systems paralleled those of the rabbit ear model, with TET, ERY, and AMP exhibiting dose-dependent hemol-ysis and muscle cell toxicity, while CEP was comparatively nontoxic. Of the three models, the rabbit ear vein had the greatest sensitivity when histopathologic evaluation was employed. The in vitro muscle cell toxicity test was slightly less sensitive than the In vivo model, followed by the in vitro hemolysis test. Results indicate that the use of these in vitro and In vivo models to evaluate venous irritancy may assist prec.linical assessment of potential clinical reactions to new parenteral drug formulations.


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