Systemic toxicity assessments for oral or parenteral drugs often utilize the concentration of drug in plasma to enable safety margin calculations for human risk assessment. For topical drugs, there is no standard method for measuring drug concentrations in the stratum basale of the viable epidermis. This is particularly important since the superficial part of the epidermis, the stratum corneum (SC), is nonviable and where most of a topically applied drug remains, never penetrating deeper into the skin. We investigated the relative concentrations of a prototype kinase inhibitor using punch biopsy, laser capture microdissection, and imaging mass spectrometry methods in the SC, stratum basale, and dermis of minipig skin following topical application as a cream formulation. The results highlight the value of laser capture microdissection and mass spectrometry imaging in quantifying the large difference in drug concentration across the skin and even within the epidermis, and supports use of these methods for threshold-based toxicity risk assessments in specific anatomic locations of the skin, like of the stratum basale.
Keywords: Concentration gradient; Epidermal toxicity; Laser capture microdissection; Mass spectrometry imaging; Skin concentration; Stratum basale; Threshold toxicity; Topical drug development; Topical risk assessment.
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