View attachment 43481
Not gonna lie, still hung up on this chart showing the calculated concentration of both FX-322 molecules in the perilymph. Maybe someone here with a better understanding of Pharmacokinetics / Pharmacodynamics can shed some light on this one?
We know that the two-molecule concentration was high enough to have a therapeutic effect at 8 kHz on the audiogram, AND that the effective window occurs between 1-3 hours after injection.
So, looking at the 8 kHz reference, I am inferring that CHIR needs to be at a minimum of about 500 ng/ml and VPA 10,000 ng/ml for a sustained period of at least 2 hours at any location in the cochlea to start the progenitor cell activation process.
Considering how the concentration curve looks for CHIR, I would suspect that by a second injection a week later, there would be a baseline of concentration in the perilymph, so additional CHIR concentration need to activate those progenitor cells would reach slightly more deeply into the cochlea.
VPA is where I have a problem. It appears to be absorbed quickly at the base; and even as deep as 2 kHz in the cochlea it is absorbed without (presumably) causing the therapeutic effect. Since both drugs are not at a high enough concentration level long enough. This creates a problem based on the chart. There is no wave of VPA flowing into the cochlea creating that baseline concentration that would be needed to increase concentration after multiple injections. Furthermore, it seems to be absorbed really quickly. So, I don't see how there would be enough VPA left in the cochlea after a 7 day window.
Any thoughts by anyone here?