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Targeting Therapeutics to Bone by Conjugation with Bisphosphonates

Resource type
Date created
2018-04-04
Authors/Contributors
Abstract
Bisphosphonates target and bind avidly to the mineral (hydroxyapatite) found in bone. This targeting ability has been exploited to design and prepare bisphosphonate conjugate prodrugs to deliver a wide variety of drug molecules selectively to bones. It is important that conjugates be stable in the blood stream and that conjugate that is not taken up by bone is eliminated rapidly. The prodrugs should release active drug at a rate appropriate so as to provide efficacy. Radiolabelling is the best method to quantify and evaluate pharmacokinetics, tissue distribution, bone uptake and release of the active drug(s). Recent reports have described bisphosphonate conjugates derived from the antiresorptive drug, alendronic acid and anabolic prostanoid drugs that effectively deliver prostaglandins and prostaglandin EP4 receptor agonists to bone and show enhanced anabolic efficacy and tolerability compared to the drugs alone. These conjugate drugs can be dosed infrequently (weekly or bimonthly) whereas the free drugs must be dosed daily.
Document
Identifier
DOI: 10.1016/j.coph.2018.03.010
Published as
Young, Robert N., Grynpas, Marc D. Targeting Therapeutics to Bone by Conjugation with Bisphosphonates. Current Opinion in Pharmacology (2018), 40, pp 87–94. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.coph.2018.03.010
Publication title
Current Opinion in Pharmacology
Document title
Targeting Therapeutics to Bone by Conjugation with Bisphosphonates
Date
2018
Volume
40
First page
87
Last page
94
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.coph.2018.03.010
Copyright statement
Copyright is held by the author(s).
Peer reviewed?
No
Language
English
Member of collection
Download file Size
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