Advances in cell-based permeability assays to screen drugs for intestinal absorption.

Donna A Volpe
Author Information
  1. Donna A Volpe: Division of Applied Regulatory Science, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring, MD, USA. ORCID

Abstract

: Successful oral therapy requires sufficient intestinal absorption to enable the drug to reach its site of action. Evaluation of intestinal permeability is important for candidate selection during drug discovery and development. cell assays that correlate with human intestinal absorption serve as an alternative to more expensive and low-throughput preclinical or clinical methods to investigate a drug's intestinal permeability.: This article focuses on cell-based models utilized to predict intestinal drug permeability. This includes the utilization of the Caco-2 and other cell epithelial lines, human primary intestinal cells, and induced pluripotent stem cells. Additional topics include co-cultures, three-dimensional models, and microfluidic systems.: permeability assays are utilized to predict a drug's permeability class or intestinal fraction absorbed. Newer Caco-2 co-cultures, intestinal epithelial cells, and three-dimensional models better replicate the architecture of the mucus and multi-cellular epithelium layer. Such models may result in an improved understanding of a drug's intestinal permeability mechanism(s). Nevertheless, these newer models require validation with larger sets of drugs having known intestinal absorption before they can be routinely utilized to estimate human intestinal drug absorption.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Animals
Caco-2 Cells
Cell Line
Coculture Techniques
Drug Development
Drug Discovery
Humans
Intestinal Absorption
Models, Biological
Permeability
Pharmaceutical Preparations

Chemicals

Pharmaceutical Preparations

Word Cloud

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