Roger Carolus Augusta Embrechts
Janssen Pharmaceutica
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Featured researches published by Roger Carolus Augusta Embrechts.
Journal of Controlled Release | 2016
Tim Gaekens; Michel Guillaume; Herman Borghys; Loeckie de Zwart; Ronald de Vries; Roger Carolus Augusta Embrechts; Angelo Vermeulen; Anton A. H. P. Megens; Josée E. Leysen; Piet Herdewijn; Pieter Annaert; John R. Atack
Nalmefene is an opioid antagonist which as a once-a-day tablet formulation has recently been approved for reducing ethanol intake in alcoholic subjects. In order to address the compliance issue in this patient population, a number of potential nalmefene prodrugs were synthesized with the aim of providing a formulation that could provide plasma drug concentrations in the region of 0.5-1.0ng/mL for a one-month period when dosed intramuscular to dogs or minipigs. In an initial series of studies, three different lipophilic nalmefene derivatives were evaluated: the palmitate (C16), the octadecyl glutarate diester (C18-C5) and the decyl carbamate (CB10). They were administered intramuscularly to dogs in a sesame oil solution at a dose of 1mg-eq. nalmefene/kg. The decyl carbamate was released relatively quickly from the oil depot and its carbamate bond was too stable to be used as a prodrug. The other two derivatives delivered a fairly constant level of 0.2-0.3ng nalmefene/mL plasma for one month and since there was no significant difference between these two, the less complex palmitate monoester was chosen to demonstrate that dog plasma nalmefene concentrations were dose-dependent at 1, 5 and 20mg-eq. nalmefene/kg. In a second set of experiments, the effect of the chain length of the fatty acid monoester promoieties was examined. The increasingly lipophilic octanoate (C8), decanoate (C10) and dodecanoate (C12) derivatives were evaluated in dogs and in minipigs, at a dose of 5mg-eq. nalmefene/kg and plasma nalmefene concentrations were measured over a four-week period. The pharmacokinetic profiles were very similar in both species with Cmax decreasing and Tmax increasing with increasing fatty acid chain length and the target plasma concentrations (0.5-1.0ng/mL over a month-long period) were achieved with the dodecanoate (C12) prodrug. These data therefore demonstrate that sustained plasma nalmefene concentrations can be achieved in both dog and minipig using nalmefene prodrugs and that the pharmacokinetic profile of nalmefene can be tuned by varying the length of the alkyl group.
Archive | 2001
Frank C. Odds; Roger Carolus Augusta Embrechts; Piet De Doncker
Archive | 1997
Marc Karel Jozef Francois; Roger Carolus Augusta Embrechts; Herman Karel Borghijs; Johan Monbaliu
Archive | 2005
Marc Karel Jozef Francois; Roger Carolus Augusta Embrechts; Willy Maria Albert Carlo Dries
Archive | 1998
Roger Carolus Augusta Embrechts; Frank C. Odds; Piet De Doncker
Archive | 1997
Marc Karel Jozef Francois; Roger Carolus Augusta Embrechts; Lisbeth Illum
Archive | 2006
Marc Karel Jozef Francois; Willy Maria Albert Carlo Dries; Roger Carolus Augusta Embrechts
Archive | 2014
Esther Dina Guido Basstanie; Johanna Bentz; Roger Carolus Augusta Embrechts; Nico Rudolph Niemeijer
Archive | 2014
Esther Dina Guido Basstanie; Johanna Bentz; Roger Carolus Augusta Embrechts; Nico Rudolph Niemeiijer
Archive | 2000
Roger Carolus Augusta Embrechts; Odds Frank Christopher; Piet De Doncker