• Pain physician · Sep 2012

    Tissue distribution of clonidine following intraforaminal implantation of biodegradable pellets: potential alternative to epidural steroid for radiculopathy.

    • Douglas P Beall, Timothy R Deer, Jared T Wilsey, Andrew Jl Walsh, Julie H Block, William F McKay, and John M Zanella.
    • Oklahoma Spine Hospital, Clinical Radiology of Oklahoma, Oklahoma City, OK, USA.
    • Pain Physician. 2012 Sep 1;15(5):E701-10.

    BackgroundEpidural steroid injections have shown efficacy in short-term pain relief, but often require repeated injections in order to provide continued pain relief. It has been suggested that a continuous, locally administered dose of an anti-inflammatory compound may provide sustained pain relief at doses lower than those needed with injections.ObjectiveTo evaluate the distribution of clonidine after transforaminal placement of a biodegradable drug delivery depot system.Study DesignA preclinical animal study.MethodsA biodegradable polymer drug depot designed to provide sustained delivery of clonidine was placed in or near a single lumbar neural foramen in 12 farm pigs. Clonidine tissue concentrations were measured at the implant site and at incremental distances from the implant over a time period of 12 weeks. Plasma clonidine levels were measured at 4 hours postimplantation on days 1, 2, 3, 5, and 7, and then weekly until the termination of the study.ResultsClonidine was detectable up to 6 cm away from the drug depot. The highest concentrations of clonidine were present within the targeted spinal nerve; the concentration decreased with increasing distance from the depot. Clonidine was undetectable in plasma from all animals at all time points.LimitationsWhile clonidine was detected up to 6 cm from the drug depot, it is unknown if the drug concentration has clinical relevance.ConclusionsThe results indicate that a biodegradable depot designed to be placed in a specific location to provide local sustained release of an anti-inflammatory and analgesic drug may be a feasible new approach to treat radicular pain associated with intervertebral disc pathology and other spinal conditions.

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