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Retinal drug concentrations were measured in treated and fellow eyes following topical administration of two potent and permeable carbonic anhydrase inhibitors, MK-927 and trifluoromethanesulfonamide (CF3SO2NH2) in the rabbit. Administration of 2 or 5 drops 2% MK-927 or 2% CF3SO2NH2 gave at 1 hr 1.5-9 microM drug in the retinas of treated eyes and 1.3-3.7 microM drug in the retinas of the fellow eye. After allowance was made for the blood content of the retinas (1.4-13%) and drug contained in whole blood due to systemic absorption, little (< 1.4 microM) or no net accumulation in retina could be documented. In a second series of experiments animals were treated with 5 mg/kg i.v. of either MK-927 or CF3SO2NH2 in order to fully saturate red cell carbonic anhydrase prior to topical administration of drug. For MK-927 there was a net accumulation in retina 3 hrs following topical administration in both treated and fellow eyes (3-4 microM) which was approximately 1/4 the concentration in plasma, suggesting that some drug had permeated the blood-retinal barrier. Similar results were obtained with CF3SO2NH2, giving no difference between treated and fellow eyes; retinal concentrations were approximately 90% of plasma concentrations. These results suggest that there is no direct access to retina by posterior or uveoscleral drainage of topically applied sulfonamides other than systemically absorbed drug.

Citation

C W Conroy. Sulfonamides do not reach the retina in therapeutic amounts after topical application to the cornea. Journal of ocular pharmacology and therapeutics : the official journal of the Association for Ocular Pharmacology and Therapeutics. 1997 Oct;13(5):465-72

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PMID: 9326728

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