Method and compositions for temporarily incapacitating subjects
A method for modifying at least one non-ester-containing parent compound, and the compounds produced using such method, which compounds are deployed to temporarily incapacitate at least one subject are disclosed. The modified compounds are rapidly metabolized to inactive and non-toxic metabolites when exposure to the modified compounds is halted. One or more of a predetermined chemical arrangement is incorporated into the parent compound having the formula: φ-R—X—R′; where φ is a phenyl, substituted aryl or heteroaryl system present in the parent compound or is added to the parent compound; R is an alkyl or alkene containing chain either branched or unbranched from 0 to 10 carbons present in the parent compound or is added to φ; X is a carboxyl, sulfoxyl or phosphatyl function added to R; and, R′ is an alkyl, alkenyl or aralkyl group either branched or unbranched containing from 1 to 10 carbons is added to X in a metabolically labile manner, or is a structural element already present as an inherent portion of the parent compound that is connected to X in a metabolically labile manner.
The present invention is a divisional application of Ser. No. 10/299,027 filed Nov. 18, 2002, now allowed, which is a continuation-in part of U.S. Ser. No. 09/570,485 filed May 12, 2000, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,750,238 B1, issued Jun. 15, 2004, which is expressly incorporated herein by reference.
STATEMENTS REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT AND RELATED APPLICATIONSThis invention was not made with Government support and the Government has no rights in this invention.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONPharmaceutical agents or drugs exhibit desirable therapeutic properties because they contain distinct molecular arrangements called pharmacophores. Oftentimes, however, the pharmacophores or the presence of other chemical components within such compounds, provide a less than ideal overall profile relative to the final deployment of a given drug for a particular clinical indication. In some cases this situation can be improved by altering chemical features associated with a drug's distribution, metabolism or elimination (DME). This process, when successful, results in what is now referred to in the pharmaceutical community as a “soft drug” version of the original or parent drug compound: Soft Drugs. XX. Design, Synthesis and Evaluation of Ultra-Short Acting beta-Blockers, H.-S. Yang, W.-M, Wu and N. Bodor, Pharm. Res., 12, 329 (1995); and Synthesis and Enzymatic Hydrolysis of Esters, Constituting Simple Models of Soft Drugs, M. Graffner-Nordberg, K. Sjodin, A. Tunek and A. Hallberg, Chem. Pharm. Bull., 46, 591 (1998).
However, unless there is compelling preclinical data which suggests that the clinical application of a lead compound is going to become problematic, DME-related features are typically not rigorously evaluated in a chemical manner during the early process of new drug discovery and development. This situation has arisen, in part, because substantial clinical experience is often required to accurately define the sometimes subtle parameters of an undesirable DME feature relative to the beneficial aspects of a new drug while the latter is within the close purview of its actual clinical use in a specific pathophysiological setting. The problem of not knowing exactly what DME and toxicity-related properties may need to be addressed is additionally confounded by not having ready chemical blueprints for how to generally proceed even when a particular DME or toxicity issue becomes suspected.
The invention disclosed herein provides a ready method for altering DME and toxicity-related properties by deploying a specific chemical blueprint. The approach is useful to initially assess the DME parameters for an entire family of potential new drug candidate possibilities during the family's very early stages of structural refinement and preclinical study. When applied in this fashion, the inventive method expedites and improves the efficiency of the overall process of drug discovery and development.
Technologies which can enhance the efficiency of the drug discovery and development process have recently become of very high interest to the global pharmaceutical enterprise: Lead Generation and Optimization, Annual Meeting Strategic Research Institute, San Diego, Jun. 23, 1997; Emerging Technologies for Drug Discovery, International Biotechnology Event National Management Health Care Congress, Boston, May 19, 1997; and Pharmaceutical Education, Interim Meeting, American Association Colleges Pharmacy, Washington, D.C., Mar. 2, 1997.
Of equal significance but in more succinct and individually directed applications, the present invention is also useful for modifying the clinically established pharmaceutical agents where the specific therapeutic/side-effect details and benefits that might be associated with such DME alterations to a parent drug molecule are already recognized for a given indication. The current move to individualize drug treatment protocols within the evolving field of pharmacogenetics further underscores the very high interest and importance for having conveniently deployable technologies which can be generally applied toward fine-tuning and tailoring the overall pharmacological profile of a given drug for a given indication within a given individual: Recommendations of the NIGMS Working Group-Understanding Individual Variations in Drug Responses: From Phenotype to Genotype, R. M. Long and R. M. Weinshilboum, NIH Report.nih.gov/nigms/news/reports/pharmacogenetics, 5 pages (Jun. 9-10, 1998).
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONIn one aspect, the present invention relates to a method of deploying one or more aralkyl ester moieties or “metabophores” within a parent drug compound. The aralkyl ester moieties are either co-constructed within the constitutive molecular framework of a parent drug compound or are added onto a parent drug compound as a distinct appendage. These constructions are done in such a manner so as to preserve the parent drug's therapeutic properties while programming a specific course for the drug's metabolism. The specific course for the drug's metabolism leads to inactive or much less active, non-toxic metabolites when the modified drug is then administered to humans by either the oral, inhalation, injection, implantable or topical routes.
Furthermore, the specific molecular details of the aralkyl ester moieties and their various placements within the parent drug's structure are able to be fine-tuned to precisely control the rate of metabolism. The rate of metabolism, in turn, can be used to control the distribution, the duration of action, the elimination, and/or the toxicity of the resulting soft drug.
The metabophores are useful for all drug types whenever the programmed ester cleavage causes fragmentation of the drug's inherent pharmacophore or leads to the production of an acidic group that can not somewhere by tolerated by the pharmacophore within the still intact parent drug.
The metabophores are also useful for producing families of closely related compounds for better optimizing the overall pharmacological profiles of new drug candidates during the process of drug design and development.
The metabophores are also useful for enhancement of the overall therapeutic profiles for a wide variety of drugs already being used.
In one aspect, the metabophores are used to program a specific course of innocuous metabolism/elimination in order to circumvent unwanted accumulation and/or toxic pathways otherwise exhibited by the parent drug.
In another aspect, the metabophores are used to program the rate for a specified metabolism in order to adjust the parent drug's duration of action to a desired shorter time interval. Alternatively, when the aralkyl ester moieties are used in conjunction with an implant or drug depot delivery system, the rate of programmed metabolism can be matched to that for the soft drug's delivery so as to precisely provide prolonged steady-state levels of the soft drug at pre-calibrated concentrations.
In another aspect, the metabophores are used to program an ultra-short duration into a parent drug to allow the resulting soft drug's actions to be under precise moment-to-moment control via its intravenous administration infusion rate, an overall drug property which has already been demonstrated to be particularly useful in critical care and surgical settings. Given the paucity of drugs and drug-related technologies that have been previously targeted for very young humans, the present invention is especially useful in the development of aralkyl ester soft drugs which are conveniently and safely deployed for the specific treatment of premature, full-term newborn or for the perinatal and neonatal populations in general.
In yet another aspect, the metabophores are useful to provide an ultra-short duration drug which allows for localizing the effects of the soft drug when the drug's initial delivery or activation within a desired compartment can also be achieved in a selective manner (e.g. localized injection, implant, surgical sutures, or localized photodynamic activation).
In still yet another aspect, the metabophores are useful to provide a soft drug pharmacological agent that can be deployed by the intravenous route to wean a patient off of a parent drug whose pharmacological action is more safely removed in a controlled, step-wise manner by progressively decreasing the rate of the intravenous drip of the soft drug version (e.g. avoidance of re-bound pharmacological events due to abrupt withdrawal of the parent compound).
In one aspect, the present invention relates to a method for modifying non-ester-containing parent compounds, and to those compounds themselves, that are deployed to temporarily incapacitate subjects, including animals and humans, so as to insure that the modified compounds are rapidly metabolized to inactive and non-toxic metabolites when the exposure to the modified compounds is halted. The method involves the incorporation of one or more of a predetermined chemical arrangement to the parent compounds, the chemical arrangement comprising
φ-R—X—R′
where φ is a phenyl, substituted aryl or heteroaryl system that is already present in the parent compound or is specifically added to the parent compound via a metabolically stable connection;
R is an alkyl or alkene containing chain either branched or unbranched from 0 to 10 carbons that is already present in the parent compound or is added to φ via a metabolically stable connection;
X is a carboxyl, sulfoxyl or phosphatyl function that is specifically added to R via a metabolically stable connection; and,
R′ is an alkyl, alkenyl or aralkyl group either branched or unbranched containing from 1 to 10 carbons that is added to X in a metabolically labile manner, or is a structural element already present as an inherent portion of the parent compound that is connected to X in a metabolically labile manner.
In certain embodiments, the compositions can comprise, for example, a composition where the parent compound is fentanyl.
In certain embodiments, the subjects can be mammals such as uncontrolled animals, or in other embodiments, humans who need to be temporarily incapacitated. The present invention is especially useful for modifying various types of defensive and offensive chemicals.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
In Structures I to III, R is an alkyl or alkene containing chain either branched or unbranched from 0 to 10 carbons, X is a carboxyl, sulfoxyl or phosphatyl function that is connected to R in a metabolically stable manner, R′ is an alkyl, alkenyl or aralkyl group either branched or unbranched containing from 1 to 10 carbons that is connected to X via a metabolically labile manner, and the lines drawn into the center of the non-nitrogen substituted phenyl ring and into the center of the aniline type of phenyl ring indicate that the so described R—X—R′ system can be attached to any of the unsubstituted positions by replacement of a hydrogen atom.
Structure IV represents the specific embodiment where R is an ethyl connecting chain, X is a carboxyl function, R′ is a methyl group and the metabophore system is completed by attachment to the para-position of the aniline type of phenyl ring system.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTIn one aspect, the present invention relates to a method for programming a specific course and rate for a parent drug compound's metabolism that leads to an inactive or very weakly active and non-toxic metabolite when the parent drug compound is administered to humans by either the oral, injection, inhalation, implantable or topical routes. The method comprises modifying the parent drug compound by forming one or more of a modifying the parent drug compound by forming one or more of a predetermined chemical arrangement within the parent drug compound. The chemical arrangement comprises A-φ-(R)—X—R′ where A is absent or is a tether moiety which allows for a metabolically stable chemical connection to be made to the parent drug compound. φ is a substituted aryl or heteroaryl system that is already present within the parent drug compound or is specifically added to the parent drug compound via A. R is an alkyl or alkene containing chain either branched or unbranched from 0 to 10 carbons that is either already present within the parent drug compound or is specifically added to the parent drug compound via connection to φ. X is a carboxyl, sulfoxyl or phosphatyl function that is specifically added to the parent drug compound via connection to R. R′ is an added alkyl, alkenyl, or aralkyl group either branched or unbranched containing from 1 to 10 carbons; other common leaving group or, a structural element already present as an inherent portion of the parent drug compound. The chemical arrangement is not used in connection with specific structural settings where the parent drug compound is an aryloxypropanolamine, a 2,6-bis(1-pyrrolidinylmethyl)-4-benzamidophenol, or where the parent drug already contains an ester moiety as an inherent component of its structure that also causes the parent drug to already exhibit a short duration of action as would be the specific cases for the classical short-acting drugs succinylcholine and procaine.
In certain embodiments, X is carboxyl. In other embodiments, R and R′ are unbranched alkyl from 1 to 2 carbons. In still other embodiments, R′ is a structural element already present as an inherent portion of the parent drug.
The modified drug is used to optimize the overall pharmacological profile of a new drug candidate during the process of drug design and development. Alternatively, the modified drug is used to enhance the overall therapeutic profile of a parent drug already being used in the clinic. The programmed metabolism of the added chemical arrangement serves to circumvent unwanted accumulation of the drug and to circumvent one or more toxic metabolic pathways.
The programmed rate of metabolism for the added chemical arrangement is adjusted to produce a shorter duration of action for the modified drug as compared to the parent drug. The shorter duration allows the actions of the modified drug to be under precise moment-to-moment control by adjustment of the infusion rate of the modified drug when administered intravenously. The intravenous administration is used to treat critical care patients and to treat neonates.
The intravenous administration is also used to wean a patient off an unmodified parent drug whose similar pharmacological action is more safely removed in a controlled, step-wise manner by progressively decreasing the rate of the intravenous drip of the modified drug. The shorter duration allows the actions of the modified drug to remain localized when the initial delivery or activation of the modified drug is targeted to a specified compartment by use of localized injection or implant materials, or by localized photodynamic activation of the modified drug. In certain embodiments, the implant is a type of surgical-related material or suture where the modified drug is an antibiotic or a compound that promotes healing.
According to one aspect of the present invention, the programmed rate of metabolism of the modified drug is matched with a release rate from a sustained-released injectable formulation or implant of the modified drug to provide for prolonged steady-state levels of the modified drug at pre-calibrated concentrations.
Also, according another aspect of the present invention, the modified drug is used as a topical treatment in order to eliminate or lessen unwanted effects that the unmodified parent drug exhibits upon systemic absorption after placement on the skin or within the eye or nasal passageways.
The method of the present invention is especially useful where the parent drug plus added chemical arrangement comprises a short-acting anti-cholinergic agent. In certain embodiments, the short-acting anti-cholinergic agent is an atropine derivative that is designed for topical administration to the eye. In other embodiments, the short-acting anti-cholinergic agent is a non-depolarizing neuromuscular junction blocking agent that is designed for use by the intravenous route during surgical-related procedures.
Also, the method of the present invention is especially useful where the parent drug plus added chemical arrangement comprises an ultra-short acting alpha1-adrenergic receptor blocker or an alpha2-adrenergic receptor agonist.
The method of the present invention is also useful where the parent drug plus added chemical arrangement comprises a short-acting inhibitor of the sodium channel. In certain embodiments, the short-acting inhibitors are administered as sustained-release or implantable dosage forms.
Still other uses of the method of the present invention include uses in which the parent drug plus the added chemical arrangement comprises an ultra-short acting ACE inhibitor; an ultra-short acting histamine receptor blocker; an ultra-short acting adenosine antagonist; an ultra-short acting anti-inflammatory agent; an ultra-short acting antiarrhythmic agent; and, an ultra-short acting calcium channel blocker.
Still further uses of the method of the present invention include uses in which the parent drug plus the added chemical arrangement comprises an ultra-short acting antibiotic compound including sulfonamide, penicillin, ampicillin, cephalosporin or tetracycline. In certain embodiments, the ultra-short acting antibiotic compounds are administered via their impregnation in surgical suture material or wound-healing implantable polymeric materials.
Yet another use of the method of the present invention includes a use in which the parent drug plus the added chemical arrangement comprises a short-acting version of methotrexate. In certain embodiments, the short-acting version of methotrexate is administered topically. The present invention is especially useful where the topical administration is used to treat epidermoid cancers or psoriasis.
In one aspect, the present invention provides a method for modifying non-ester-containing parent compounds that are deployed to temporarily incapacitate subjects, so as to insure that the modified compounds are rapidly metabolized to inactive and non-toxic metabolites when the exposure to the modified compounds is halted. The method involves the incorporation of one or more of a predetermined chemical arrangement to the parent compounds. The chemical arrangement comprises
φ-R—X—R′
where φ is a phenyl, substituted aryl or heteroaryl system that is already present in the parent drug compound or is specifically added to the parent drug compound via a metabolically stable connection;
R is an alkyl or alkene containing chain either branched or unbranched from 0 to 10 carbons that is already present in the parent drug compound or is added to φ via a metabolically stable connection;
X is a carboxyl, sulfoxyl or phosphatyl function that is specifically added to R via a metabolically stable connection; and,
R′ is an added alkyl, alkenyl or aralkyl group either branched or unbranched containing from 1 to 10 carbons that is added to X in a metabolically labile manner, or is a structural element already present as an inherent portion of the parent drug compound that is connected to X in a metabolically labile manner.
In certain embodiments, the φ is a phenyl system that is already present in the parent compound, R is an added alkyl or alkene containing chain either branched or unbranched from 0 to 10 carbons, X is a carboxyl, sulfoxyl or phosphatyl function, and R′ is an alkyl group either branched or unbranched containing from 1 to 10 carbons. One example of such method is where the parent compound is fentanyl.
One use of the method involves the incorporation of the metabophore into chemicals that are legally used to temporarily incapacitate desired subjects, such as uncontrolled mammals or humans, who need to be temporarily incapacitated. The use of these types of chemicals produced by the method of the present invention is less harmful to the subjects being incapacitated and is safer for any innocent, nearby parties who may become accidentally exposed to the chemical. These types of legal uses include defensive products that are available to the general public such as “chemical mace” and offensive products that would be available only to law enforcement or the military units of countries that comply to internationally recognized treaties pertaining to the use and non-use of chemical weapons. In such cases, the benefits from incorporating the metabophore disclosed herein include the ability to program a very short duration of effect, to program the production of non-toxic metabolites, and to utilize the ubiquitous esterases to perform the programmed, or directed, metabolic steps. The last benefit is particularly important when the innocent parties may have less than their normal ability to recover from the exposure to drugs in general, such as can be the case for persons being held hostage for several days or longer. This is because, unlike many of the other drug-handling metabolic pathways, the esterase status of humans should be less subject to reductions due to ill-health, sleep deprivation, malnutrition and other negative environmental factors. For example, just recently the Russians legally deployed aerosolized fentanyl to thwart a major hostage situation that was taking place in a theater but in the process of incapacitating the terrorists, 115 of the 750 innocent hostages were accidentally killed (Chemical and Engineering News, page 6, Nov. 4, 2002). While fentanyl is a rapid and short-acting narcotic otherwise used as a short duration painkiller, it is not ultra-short and it does not rely on esterases to end its activity. A large number of the innocent deaths are now suspected to have occurred because many of the hostages no longer had their normal ability to metabolize drugs in general, and in this case to clear-out the fentanyl. Thus, in a situation like this the hostages had become more susceptible to the chemical's toxicity than the captors. Alternatively, by incorporating the metabophore disclosed herein into the fentanyl parent drug molecule and then using the resulting modified drug that has been programmed, or directed, to be metabolized by the ubiquitous and still robust esterases, perhaps only a few, if any, of the innocent hostages would have been killed. ARTICLE II.7 of the International Treaty on the use of chemical weapons defines a “riot-control agent” as a chemical not listed as a banned item in the International Treaty and that produces rapid disabling effects that quickly disappear after exposure ends. The metabophore technology disclosed herein is ideally suited for producing this type of rapid onset and quick disappearance profile in a wide variety of parent molecules that are not short acting to begin with, or to further improve upon this type of profile in various parent molecules that already have a short duration of action but do not rely upon esterases as the basis for ending their activity.
Referring now to Structures 2 and 3 in
Referring to
Referring to
Thus, the method of the present invention provides for the general use of a distinct metabophoric chemical arrangement that is incorporated one or more times within a parent drug compound. Specifically, variations within a defined family of an aralkyl ester moiety constitute the distinct metabophoric arrangements that are incorporated one or more times into a parent drug compound such that initially there is a minimal impact upon the original desired pharmacological activity exhibited by the parent drug. The metabophore units are subject, however, to Phase 1 metabolic hydrolysis by one or more of the esterases, sulfatases, phosphatases, CYPs and the like. In
While the exact numbers and preferred chemical embodiments for the metabophores are ultimately dictated via optimization within each individual case of drug and indication, there are some arrangements which generally provide for the most chemically efficient and pharmacologically compatible deployments of the inventive method. In the case of the external esters, Structure 6, the preferred embodiment often reflects incorporation of not more than two metabophores. In addition, for the preferred embodiment A is absent, B and C are at least partially derivable from structural elements already present within the parent pharmacophore, D is a carboxylic ester and E is an alkyl group. In the most preferred general embodiment only a single metabophore is utilized, C is further specified to be one or two unsubstituted carbons distant from B, and E is further specified to be a simple methyl or ethyl group. In the case of the internal esters, Structure 7, the generally preferred embodiment involves deployment of just one metabophore, where A is absent, B and C are at least partially derivable from features already present within the parent pharmacophore or C is completely absent (alkyl —(CH2)n— case where n=0), D is a carboxylic ester, and E is an integral part of the inherent pharmacophore as long as its connection to D is represented by at least one, non-sterically hindered methylene unit. An arrangement which simultaneously deploys one internal ester metabophore plus one or two external ester metabophores is also a particularly useful embodiment when extremely ultra-short durations of action are being sought for a particular indication.
Referring now to
The inventive technology is further illustrated in
Emergency room medical practice requires a titrable, quickly equilibrating and short action version of clonidine, Structure 9 in
The use of methotrexate (Structure 10 in
In structures I to III, R is an alkyl or alkene containing chain either branched or unbranched from 0 to 10 carbons, X is a carboxyl, sulfoxyl or phosphatyl function that is connected to R in a metabolically stable manner, R′ is an alkyl, alkenyl or aralkyl group either branched or unbranched containing from 1 to 10 carbons that is connected to X via a metabolically labile manner, and the lines drawn into the center of the non-nitrogen substituted phenyl ring and into the center of the aniline type of phenyl ring indicate that the so described R—X—R′ system can be attached to any of the unsubstituted positions by replacement of a hydrogen atom.
Structure IV represents the specific embodiment where R is an ethyl connecting chain, X is a carboxyl function, R′ is a methyl group and the metabophore system is completed by attachment to the para-position of the aniline type of phenyl ring system.
EXAMPLE 15 In certain embodiments, composition comprises fentanyl which is modified by incorporating one or more of a predetermined chemical arrangement to the inherent, non-nitrogen substituted phenyl ring system. In such embodiments, the chemical arrangement comprises
R—X—R′
where R is an alkyl or alkene containing chain either branched or unbranched from 0 to 10 carbons that is directly connected to any un-substituted carbon atom within the phenyl ring system;
X is a carboxyl, sulfoxyl or phosphatyl function that is connected to R via a metabolically stable linkage; and,
R′ is an alkyl, alkenyl or aralkyl group either branched or unbranched containing from 1 to 10 carbons that is connected to X via a linkage that is labile toward metabolism by the subject, such as humans.
EXAMPLE 16In certain embodiments, the compositions include the compositions of Example 15 above when one predetermined chemical arrangement is added and wherein R is an ethyl chain, X is a carboxyl function, and R′ is a methyl group.
EXAMPLE 17 In other embodiments, compositions comprise fentanyl which is modified by connecting one or more of a predetermined chemical arrangement to the aniline type of inherent phenyl ring system. In such embodiments, the chemical arrangement comprises
R—X—R′
where R is an alkyl, or alkenyl containing chain either branched or unbranched from 0 to 10 carbons that is connected to any un-substituted carbon atom within the phenyl ring system;
X is a carboxyl, sulfoxyl or phosphatyl function that is connected to R via a metabolically stable linkage; and,
R′ is an alkyl, alkenyl or aralkyl group either branched or unbranched containing from 1 to 10 carbons connected to X via a linkage that is labile toward metabolism by humans. One example of such composition results when one predetermined chemical arrangement is added and wherein R is an ethyl chain, X is a carboxyl function, and R′ is a methyl group.
EXAMPLE 18 In certain embodiments, compositions comprise fentanyl which is modified by connecting one predetermined chemical arrangement to the non-nitrogen substituted inherent phenyl ring system and by connecting one predetermined chemical arrangement to the aniline type of inherent phenyl ring system. Such chemical arrangement comprises
R—X—R′
where R is an alkyl or alkene containing chain either branched or unbranched from 0 to 10 carbons that is directly connected to any un-substituted carbon atom within the inherent phenyl ring systems;
X is a carboxyl, sulfoxyl or phosphatyl function that is connected to R via a metabolically stable linkage; and,
R′ is an alkyl, alkenyl or aralkyl group either branched or unbranched containing from 1 to 10 carbons that is connected to X via a linkage that is labile toward metabolism by the subject, such as humans.
EXAMPLE 19Another example of the composition shown in example 18 above is a composition that results when R is an ethyl group in both instances, X is a carboxyl function in both instances, and R′ is a methyl group in both instances.
EXAMPLE 20In yet another embodiment, composition comprises at least one predetermined chemical arrangement which is connected to the para-position of the aniline type of inherent phenyl ring system present in fentanyl, where R is an ethyl connecting chain, X is a carboxyl function and R′ is a methyl group.
One skilled in the art will readily appreciate that the present invention is well adapted to carry out the objects and obtain the ends and advantages mentioned, as well as those inherent therein. The present examples along with the methods, procedures, treatment, molecules and specific compounds described herein are presently representative of preferred embodiments, are exemplary, and are not intended as limitations on the scope of the invention. Changes therein and other uses will occur to those skilled in the art which are encompassed within the spirit of the invention as defined by the scope of the claims. Any patents or publications mentioned in this specification are indicative of the levels of those skilled in the art to which the invention pertains. These patents and publications are herein incorporated by reference to the same extent as if each individual publication was specifically and individually indicated to be incorporated by reference.
Claims
1. A composition having the following structure:
- wherein R is an alkyl or alkene containing chain either branched or unbranched from 1 to 10 carbons that is directly connected to any un-substituted carbon atom within the phenyl ring system;
- X is a carboxyl, sulfoxyl or phosphatyl function that is connected to R via a metabolically stable linkage; and,
- R′ is an alkyl, alkenyl or aralkyl group either branched or unbranched containing from 1 to 10 carbons that is connected to X via a linkage that is labile toward metabolism by a subject.
2. The composition of claim 1, wherein R is an ethyl chain, and R′ is a methyl group.
3. The composition of claim 1, wherein R is an ethyl chain, and R′ is ethyl.
4. A method for temporarily incapacitating a subject, comprising administering an effective amount of a composition of claim 1 to the subject.
5. The method of claim 2, in which the subject is a mammal.
6. The composition having the following structure:
- wherein R is an alkyl or alkene containing chain either branched or unbranched from 1 to 10 carbons that is directly connected to any un-substituted carbon atom within the phenyl ring system;
- X is a carboxyl, sulfoxyl or phosphatyl function that is connected to R via a metabolically stable linkage; and,
- R′ is an alkyl, alkenyl or aralkyl group either branched or unbranched containing from 1 to 10 carbons that is connected to X via a linkage that is labile toward metabolism by a subject;
- except when X is a carboxyl, R′ is not Me.
7. The composition of claim 6, wherein R is an ethyl chain, and R′ is a methyl group.
8. The composition of claim 6, wherein R is an ethyl chain, and R′ is ethyl.
9. A method for temporarily incapacitating a subject, comprising administering an effective amount of a composition of claim 6 to the subject.
10. The method of claim 9, in which the subject is a mammal
11. A composition having the following structure:
- wherein R is an alkyl or alkene containing chain either branched or unbranched from 1 to 10 carbons that is directly connected to any un-substituted carbon atom within the phenyl ring system;
- X is a sulfoxyl or phosphatyl function that is connected to R via a metabolically stable linkage; and,
- R′ is an alkyl, alkenyl or aralkyl group either branched or unbranched containing from 1 to 10 carbons that is connected to X via a linkage that is labile toward metabolism by a subject.
12. The composition of claim 12, wherein R is an ethyl chain, and R′ is a methyl group.
13. The composition of claim 12, wherein R is an ethyl chain, and R′ is ethyl.
14. A method for temporarily incapacitating a subject, comprising administering an effective amount of a composition of claim 12 to the subject.
15. The method of claim 14, in which the subject is a mammal
16. A composition used to incapacitate subjects comprising at least one non-ester-containing parent compound modified by one or more of a predetermined chemical arrangement incorporated to an inherent phenyl ring system, the chemical arrangement comprising: φ-R—X—R′
- wherein φ is a phenyl, substituted aryl or heteroaryl system that is already present in the parent compound or is specifically added to the parent compound via a metabolically stable connection;
- R is an alkyl or alkene containing chain either branched or unbranched from 0 to 10 carbons that is already present in the parent compound or is added to φ via a metabolically stable connection;
- X is a carboxyl, sulfoxyl or phosphatyl function that is specifically added to R via a metabolically stable connection; and,
- R′ is an alkyl, alkenyl or aralkyl group either branched or unbranched containing from 1 to 10 carbons that is added to X in a metabolically labile manner, or is a structural element already present as an inherent portion of the parent compound that is connected to X in a metabolically labile manner.
Type: Application
Filed: Apr 19, 2006
Publication Date: Oct 5, 2006
Inventor: Paul Erhardt (Sylvania, OH)
Application Number: 11/406,902
International Classification: A61K 31/675 (20060101); A61K 31/445 (20060101);