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Dive into the research topics where Susan Fetherston is active.

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Featured researches published by Susan Fetherston.


International Journal of Women's Health | 2012

Vaginal rings for delivery of HIV microbicides

R. Karl Malcolm; Susan Fetherston; Clare McCoy; Peter Boyd; Ian Major

Following the successful development of long-acting steroid-releasing vaginal ring devices for the treatment of menopausal symptoms and contraception, there is now considerable interest in applying similar devices to the controlled release of microbicides against HIV. In this review article, the vaginal ring concept is first considered within the wider context of the early advances in controlled-release technology, before describing the various types of ring device available today. The remainder of the article highlights the key developments in HIV microbicide-releasing vaginal rings, with a particular focus on the dapivirine ring that is presently in late-stage clinical testing.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2012

Sustained Release of the CCR5 Inhibitors CMPD167 and Maraviroc from Vaginal Rings in Rhesus Macaques

R. Karl Malcolm; Ronald S. Veazey; Leslie Geer; Deborah Lowry; Susan Fetherston; Diarmaid J. Murphy; Peter Boyd; Ian Major; Robin J. Shattock; Per Johan Klasse; Laura A. Doyle; Kelsi K. Rasmussen; Laurie Goldman; Thomas J. Ketas; John P. Moore

ABSTRACT Antiretroviral entry inhibitors are now being considered as vaginally administered microbicide candidates for the prevention of the sexual transmission of human immunodeficiency virus. Previous studies testing the entry inhibitors maraviroc and CMPD167 in aqueous gel formulations showed efficacy in the macaque challenge model, although protection was highly dependent on the time period between initial gel application and subsequent challenge. In this paper, we describe the sustained release of maraviroc and CMPD167 from matrix-type silicone elastomer vaginal rings both in vitro and in vivo. Both inhibitors were released continuously during 28 days from rings in vitro at rates of 100 to 2,500 μg/day. In 28-day pharmacokinetic studies in rhesus macaques, the compounds were measured in the vaginal fluid and vaginal tissue; steady-state fluid concentrations were ∼106-fold greater than the 50% inhibitory concentrations (IC50s) for simian human immunodeficiency virus 162P3 inhibition in macaque lymphocytes in vitro. Plasma concentrations for both compounds were very low. The pretreatment of macaques with Depo-Provera (DP), which is commonly used in macaque challenge studies, was shown to significantly modify the biodistribution of the inhibitors but not the overall amount released. Vaginal fluid and tissue concentrations were significantly decreased while plasma levels increased with DP pretreatment. These observations have implications for designing macaque challenge experiments and also for ring performance during the human female menstrual cycle.


European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2013

A silicone elastomer vaginal ring for HIV prevention containing two microbicides with different mechanisms of action

Susan Fetherston; Peter Boyd; Clare McCoy; Marcella McBride; Karen-Leigh Edwards; Stephen Ampofo; R. Karl Malcolm

Vaginal rings are currently being developed for the long-term (at least 30 days) continuous delivery of microbicides against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Research to date has mostly focused on devices containing a single antiretroviral compound, exemplified by the 25mg dapivirine ring currently being evaluated in a Phase III clinical study. However, there is a strong clinical rationale for combining antiretrovirals with different mechanisms of action in a bid to increase breadth of protection and limit the emergence of resistant strains. Here we report the development of a combination antiretroviral silicone elastomer matrix-type vaginal ring for simultaneous controlled release of dapivirine, a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor, and maraviroc, a CCR5-targeted HIV-1 entry inhibitor. Vaginal rings loaded with 25mg dapivirine and various quantities of maraviroc (50-400mg) were manufactured and in vitro release assessed. The 25mg dapivirine and 100mg maraviroc formulation was selected for further study. A 24-month pharmaceutical stability evaluation was conducted, indicating good product stability in terms of in vitro release, content assay, mechanical properties and related substances. This combination ring product has now progressed to Phase I clinical testing.


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2013

Partial protection against multiple RT-SHIV162P3 vaginal challenge of rhesus macaques by a silicone elastomer vaginal ring releasing the NNRTI MC1220

Susan Fetherston; Leslie Geer; Ronald S. Veazey; Laurie Goldman; Diarmaid J. Murphy; Thomas J. Ketas; Per Johan Klasse; Sylvain Blois; Paolo La Colla; John P. Moore; R. Karl Malcolm

OBJECTIVES The non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor MC1220 has potent in vitro activity against HIV type 1 (HIV-1). A liposome gel formulation of MC1220 has previously been reported to partially protect rhesus macaques against vaginal challenge with a simian HIV (SHIV). Here, we describe the pre-clinical development of an MC1220-releasing silicone elastomer vaginal ring (SEVR), including pharmacokinetic (PK) and efficacy studies in macaques. METHODS In vitro release studies were conducted on SEVRs loaded with 400 mg of MC1220, using simulated vaginal fluid (SVF, n = 4) and 1 : 1 isopropanol/water (IPA/H(2)O, n = 4) as release media. For PK evaluation, SEVRs were inserted into adult female macaques (n = 6) for 30 days. Following a 1 week washout period, fresh rings were placed in the same animals, which were then challenged vaginally with RT-SHIV162P3 once weekly for 4 weeks. RESULTS SEVRs released 1.66 and 101 mg of MC1220 into SVF and IPA/H(2)O, respectively, over 30 days, the differential reflecting the low aqueous solubility of the drug. In macaque PK studies, MC1220 was consistently detected in vaginal fluid (peak 845 ng/mL) and plasma (peak 0.91 ng/mL). Kaplan-Meier analysis over 9 weeks showed significantly lower infection rates for animals given MC1220-containing SEVRs than placebo rings (hazard ratio 0.20, P = 0.0037). CONCLUSIONS An MC1220-releasing SEVR partially protected macaques from vaginal challenge. Such ring devices are a practical method for providing sustained, coitally independent protection against vaginal exposure to HIV-1.


Contraception | 2013

Delivering on MPTs: addressing the needs, rising to the challenges and making the opportunities

R. Karl Malcolm; Susan Fetherston

Multipurpose prevention technologies (MPTs) have the potential to address global reproductive and sexual health issues such as unintended pregnancy and STIs including HIV HPV herpes simplex virus and syphilis. MPTs are products that are intentionally designed for meeting more than one sexual and/or reproductive need. Examples of current MPTs include male and female condoms and vaginal microbicides. However there are other existing contraceptive technologies such as rings injectables and oral pills that could be transformed into MPTs. Challenges in their development relate to requirement of complementary duration of clinical effect for each of the different clinical indications and the difficulty inherent in simultaneous evaluation of both clinical outcomes. Copyright


International Journal of Pharmaceutics | 2016

Matrix and reservoir-type multipurpose vaginal rings for controlled release of dapivirine and levonorgestrel

Peter Boyd; Susan Fetherston; Clare McCoy; Ian Major; Diarmaid J. Murphy; Sandeep Kumar; Jonathon Holt; Andrew Brimer; Wendy Blanda; Brid Devlin; R. Karl Malcolm

A matrix-type silicone elastomer vaginal ring providing 28-day continuous release of dapivirine (DPV) - a lead candidate human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) microbicide compound - has recently demonstrated moderate levels of protection in two Phase III clinical studies. Here, next-generation matrix and reservoir-type silicone elastomer vaginal rings are reported for the first time offering simultaneous and continuous in vitro release of DPV and the contraceptive progestin levonorgestrel (LNG) over a period of between 60 and 180days. For matrix-type vaginal rings comprising initial drug loadings of 100, 150 or 200mg DPV and 0, 16 or 32mg LNG, Day 1 daily DPV release values were between 4132 and 6113μg while Day 60 values ranged from 284 to 454μg. Daily LNG release ranged from 129 to 684μg on Day 1 and 2-91μg on Day 60. Core-type rings comprising one or two drug-loaded cores provided extended duration of in vitro release out to 180days, and maintained daily drug release rates within much narrower windows (either 75-131μg/day or 37-66μg/day for DPV, and either 96-150μg/day or 37-57μg/day for LNG, depending on core ring configuration and ignoring initial lag release effect for LNG) compared with matrix-type rings. The data support the continued development of these devices as multi-purpose prevention technologies (MPTs) for HIV prevention and long-acting contraception.


PLOS ONE | 2015

A temperature-monitoring vaginal ring for measuring adherence.

Peter Boyd; Delphine Desjardins; Sandeep Kumar; Susan Fetherston; Roger LeGrand; Nathalie Dereuddre-Bosquet; Berglind Helgadóttir; Ásgeir Bjarnason; Manjulaa Narasimhan; R. Karl Malcolm

Background Product adherence is a pivotal issue in the development of effective vaginal microbicides to reduce sexual transmission of HIV. To date, the six Phase III studies of vaginal gel products have relied primarily on self-reporting of adherence. Accurate and reliable methods for monitoring user adherence to microbicide-releasing vaginal rings have yet to be established. Methods A silicone elastomer vaginal ring prototype containing an embedded, miniature temperature logger has been developed and tested in vitro and in cynomolgus macaques for its potential to continuously monitor environmental temperature and accurately determine episodes of ring insertion and removal. Results In vitro studies demonstrated that DST nano-T temperature loggers encapsulated in medical grade silicone elastomer were able to accurately and continuously measure environmental temperature. The devices responded quickly to temperature changes despite being embedded in different thickness of silicone elastomer. Prototype vaginal rings measured higher temperatures compared with a subcutaneously implanted device, showed high sensitivity to diurnal fluctuations in vaginal temperature, and accurately detected periods of ring removal when tested in macaques. Conclusions Vaginal rings containing embedded temperature loggers may be useful in the assessment of product adherence in late-stage clinical trials.


Therapeutic Delivery | 2010

Controlled-release vaginal ring drug-delivery systems: a key strategy for the development of effective HIV microbicides

Susan Fetherston; R. Karl Malcolm; A. David Woolfson


Microbicides 2010 | 2010

Formulation Development of Matrix-Type Silicone Elastomer Vaginal Rings Containing Protease Inhibitors

Karl Malcolm; Susan Fetherston; David Woolfson; Charles Lacey; Robin J. Shattock


Microbicides 2010 | 2010

Silicone elastomer rings for sustained delivery of HIV microbicides: correlating historical in vitro and in vivo release data

Karl Malcolm; Deborah Lowry; Susan Fetherston; Christopher McConville; David Woolfson

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Peter Boyd

Queen's University Belfast

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R. Karl Malcolm

Queen's University Belfast

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Clare McCoy

Queen's University Belfast

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Karl Malcolm

International Partnership for Microbicides

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Ian Major

Athlone Institute of Technology

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Andrew Brimer

International Partnership for Microbicides

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Brid Devlin

International Partnership for Microbicides

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Jonathon Holt

International Partnership for Microbicides

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