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Transport of Pharmocokinetic Agents Placed in the Pericardial Sac Through the Myocardium: Insights From Physical Modeling Xianfeng Song, Department of Physics, IUB Keith L. March, IUPUI Medical School Sima Setayeshgar, Department of Physics, IUB March 22, 2005 Xianfeng Song, Indiana University, Bloomington, March APS Meeting 2005, Los Angeles Pericardial Delivery: Motivation The pericardial sac is a fluid-filled self-contained space surrounding the heart. As such, it can be potentially used therapeutically as a “drug reservoir.” Delivery of anti-arrhythmic, gene therapeutic agents to Coronary vasculature Myocardium Recent experimental feasibility of pericardial access Verrier VL, et al., “Transatrial access to the normal pericardial space: a novel approach for diagnostic sampling, pericardiocentesis and therapeutic interventions,” Circulation (1998) 98:2331-2333. Stoll HP, et al., “Pharmacokinetic and consistency of pericardial delivery directed to coronary arteries: direct comparison with endoluminal delivery,” Clin Cardiol (1999) 22(Suppl-I): I-10-I-16. Vperi (human) =10ml – 50ml Xianfeng Song, Indiana University, Bloomington, March APS Meeting 2005, Los Angeles This work: Outline Experiments on juvenile farm pigs to measure the spatial concentration profile in the myocardium of agents placed in the pericardial space Mathematical modeling to investigate the efficacy of agent penetration in myocardial tissue, extract the key physical parameters Comparison with data Conclusions Xianfeng Song, Indiana University, Bloomington, March APS Meeting 2005, Los Angeles Experiments Experimental subjects: juvenile farm pigs Radiotracer method to determine the spatial concentration profile from gamma radiation rate, using radio-iodinated test agents Insulin-like Growth Factor (125I-IGF, MW: 7734 Da) Basic Fibroblast Growth Factor (125I-bFGF, MW: 18000 Da) Initial concentration delivered to the pericardial sac at t=0 200 or 2000 mg in 10 ml of injectate Harvesting at t=1h or 24h after delivery Xianfeng Song, Indiana University, Bloomington, March APS Meeting 2005, Los Angeles Experimental Procedure At t = T (1h or 24h), sac fluid is distilled, several strips at different locations from myocardium are excised. Strips are submerged in liquid nitrogen to fix concentration. Cylindrical transmyocardial specimens are sectioned into slices. CT(x,T) = Si CiT(x,T) Gamma radiation CPM is used to determine the concentration, CiT(x,T), CP(T). Xianfeng Song, Indiana University, Bloomington, March APS Meeting 2005, Los Angeles Mathematical Modeling Goals Determine key physical processes, and extract governing parameters Assess the efficacy of drug penetration in the myocardium using this mode of delivery Key physical processes Substrate transport across boundary layer between pericardial sac and myocardium: Substrate diffusion in myocardium: DT Substrate washout in myocardium (through the intramural vascular and lymphatic capillaries): k Xianfeng Song, Indiana University, Bloomington, March APS Meeting 2005, Los Angeles Idealized Spherical Geometry Pericardial sac: R2 – R3 Myocardium: R1 – R2 Chamber: 0 – R1 R1 = 2.5cm R2 = 3.5cm Vperi: 10ml - 40ml Xianfeng Song, Indiana University, Bloomington, March APS Meeting 2005, Los Angeles Governing Equations and Boundary Conditions Governing equation in myocardium: diffusion + washout CT: concentration of agent in tissue DT: effective diffusion constant in tissue k: washout rate Pericardial sac as a drug reservoir (well-mixed and no washout): drug number conservation Boundary condition: drug current through the boundary between pericardial sac and myocardium is proportional to the concentration difference between them Xianfeng Song, Indiana University, Bloomington, March APS Meeting 2005, Los Angeles Fit to experiments Conce Drug Concentration Error surface 1 Molecule per ml = 1.3 x10-11 picograms per ml Xianfeng Song, Indiana University, Bloomington, March APS Meeting 2005, Los Angeles Fit Results Numerical values for DT, k, consistent for IGF, bFGF within experimental errors Xianfeng Song, Indiana University, Bloomington, March APS Meeting 2005, Los Angeles Time-course from simulation Parameters: DT=7×10-6cm2s-1 k=5×10-4s-1 α=3.2×10-6cm2s2 Xianfeng Song, Indiana University, Bloomington, March APS Meeting 2005, Los Angeles Effective Diffusion,D*, in tortuous media Stokes-Einstein relation D: diffusion constant R: hydrodynamic radius : viscosity T: temperature In tortuous media D*: effective diffusion constant D: diffusion constant in fluid : tortuosity For myocardium, = 2.11. (from M. Suenson, D.R. Richmond, J.B. Bassingthwaighte, “Diffusion of sucrose, sodium, and water in ventricular myocardium, American Joural of Physiology,” 227(5), 1974 ) Numerical estimates for diffusion constants IGF : D ~ 4 x 10-7 cm2s-1 bFGF: D ~ 3 x 10-7 cm2s-1 Our fitted values are in order of 10-6 - 10-5 cm2sec-1, 10 to 50 times larger !! Xianfeng Song, Indiana University, Bloomington, March APS Meeting 2005, Los Angeles Transport via intramural vasculature Drug permeates into vasculature from extracellular space at high concentration and permeates out of the vasculature into the extracellular space at low concentration, thereby increasing the effective diffusion constant in the tissue. Epi Endo Xianfeng Song, Indiana University, Bloomington, March APS Meeting 2005, Los Angeles Diffusion in an active viscoelastic medium Heart tissue is a porous medium consisting of extracellular space and muscle fibers. The extracellular space consists of an incompressible fluid (mostly water) and collagen. Expansion and contraction of the fiber sheets leads to changes in pore size at the tissue level and therefore mixing of the extracellular volume. This effective "stirring" results in larger diffusion constants. Xianfeng Song, Indiana University, Bloomington, March APS Meeting 2005, Los Angeles Conclusion Model accounting for effective diffusion and washout is consistent with experiments despite its simplicity. Quantitative determination of numerical values for physical parameters Effective diffusion constant IGF: DT = (9±3) x 10-6 cm2s-1, bFGF: DT = (6±3) x 10-6 cm2s-1 Washout rate IGF: k = (7±2) x 10-4 s-1, bFGF: k = ?? Peri-epicardial boundary permeability IGF: = (3.8±0.8) x 10-6 cm s-1, bFGF: = ???? Enhanced effective diffusion, allowing for improved transport. Feasibility of computational studies of amount and time course of pericardial drug delivery to cardiac tissue, using experimentally derived values for physical parameters. Xianfeng Song, Indiana University, Bloomington, March APS Meeting 2005, Los Angeles