Objective: In order to document the stereoselective distribution in joints of a chiral nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, the relative affinities of the enantiomers of tiaprofenic acid in synovium and for cartilage were compared.
Methods: The distribution of tiaprofenic acid in synovium and in cartilage was studied 25 h after administering the racemic drug for 2 days (600 mg of a sustained-release preparation, once daily), in 12 inpatients with osteoarthritis of the hip requiring arthroplasty. Enantiomers were quantified in plasma and freeze-ground tissues by a chiral HPLC assay.
Results: Plasma concentrations of the dextrorotatory (R) enantiomer (0.40 microgram/ml) were higher than those of its antipode. The concentration of racemate in synovium (in dried and fresh tissues, 150% and 40%, respectively, of the concentration in plasma) was much higher than that in cartilage (in dried tissues 32% of the plasma concentration). The ratio of the active, dextrorotatory (R) enantiomer to its antipode was higher in synovial tissue than in plasma.
Conclusion: Tiaprofenic acid is distributed stereoselectively in plasma and synovium, which contain a higher concentration of the active, dextrorotatory (R) enantiomer. In cartilage, it reaches only a very low concentration.