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New application of an old drug proparacaine in treating epilepsy via liposomal hydrogel formulation

Abdoh Taleb, Yaping Zhou, Lingtong Meng, Ming-Yi Zhu, Qiao Zhang, Muhammad Naveed, Liandi Li, Peng Wang, Qi‐Gang Zhou, Fan Meng, Feng Han

2021Pharmacological Research31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Proparacaine (PPC) is a previously discovered topical anesthetic for ophthalmic optometry and surgery by blocking the central Nav1.3. In this study, we found that proparacaine hydrochloride (PPC-HCl) exerted an acute robust antiepileptic effect in pilocarpine-induced epilepsy mice. More importantly, chronic treatment with PPC-HCl totally terminated spontaneous recurrent seizure occurrence without significant toxicity. Chronic treatment with PPC-HCl did not cause obvious cytotoxicity, neuropsychiatric adverse effects, hepatotoxicity, cardiotoxicity, and even genotoxicity that evaluated by whole genome-scale transcriptomic analyses. Only when in a high dose (50 mg/kg), the QRS interval measured by electrocardiography was slightly prolonged, which was similar to the impact of levetiracetam. Nevertheless, to overcome this potential issue, we adopt a liposome encapsulation strategy that could alleviate cardiotoxicity and prepared a type of hydrogel containing PPC-HCl for sustained release. Implantation of thermosensitive chitosan-based hydrogel containing liposomal PPC-HCl into the subcutaneous tissue exerted immediate and long-lasting remission from spontaneous recurrent seizure in epileptic mice without affecting QRS interval. Therefore, this new liposomal hydrogel formulation of proparacaine could be developed as a transdermal patch for treating epilepsy, avoiding the severe toxicity after chronic treatment with current antiepileptic drugs in clinic.

Topics & Concepts

Topical anestheticTransdermalCardiotoxicityLevetiracetamPharmacologyEpilepsyAnesthesiaMedicineTransdermal patchPilocarpineAdverse effectToxicityAnestheticInternal medicinePsychiatryEpilepsy research and treatmentAdvanced Drug Delivery SystemsPharmacological Effects and Toxicity Studies