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Design, Synthesis, and Evaluation of Prodrugs of Ertapenem

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posted on 2013-08-08, 00:00 authored by Sheo B. Singh, Diane Rindgen, Prudence Bradley, Lovji Cama, Wanying Sun, Michael J. Hafey, Takao Suzuki, Nengxue Wang, Hao Wu, Basheng Zhang, Li Wang, Chongmin Ji, Hongshi Yu, Richard Soll, David B. Olsen, Peter T. Meinke, Deborah A. Nicoll-Griffith
Carbapenems are intravenous lifesaving hospital antibiotics. Once patients leave the hospital, they are sent home with antibiotics other than carbapenems since they cannot be administered orally due to lack of oral absorption primarily because of very highly polarity. A prodrug approach is a bona fide strategy to improve oral absorption of compounds. Design and synthesis, in vitro and in vivo evaluation of diversified prodrugs of ertapenem, one of the only once daily dosed carbapenems is described. Many of the prodrugs prepared for evaluation are rapidly hydrolyzed in rat plasma. Only bis-(5-methyl-2-oxo-1,3-dioxol-4-yl)­methyl (medoxomil) ester prodrug was rapidly hydrolyzed in most of the plasmas including rat, human, dog, and monkey. Although the rate of conversion of ertapenem diethyl ester prodrug (6) was slow in in vitro plasma hydrolysis, it showed the best in vivo pharmacokinetic profile in dog by an intraduodenal dosing giving >31% total oral absorption.

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