The Lungs as a Portal of Entry for Systemic Drug Delivery

2004 
The lung is naturally permeable to all small-molecule drugs studied and to many therapeutic peptides and proteins. Absorption can be estimated using a simple animal test, intratracheal instillation. Inhalation offers a noninvasive route for the delivery of peptides and proteins that otherwise must be injected. Peptides that have been chemically altered to inhibit peptidase enzymes exhibit very high bioavailabilities by the pulmonary route. Natural mammalian peptides, less than about 30 amino acids, are broken down in the lung by ubiquitous peptidases and have very poor bioavailabilities. In general, proteins with molecular weights between 6,000 and 50,000 D are relatively resistant to most peptidases and have good bioavailabilities following inhalation. For larger proteins the bioavailability picture is not clear. Although the lung is rich in antiproteases, aggregation of inhaled proteins will stimulate opsonization (coating) by special proteins in the lung lining fluids, which will then mark the aggregat...
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