Evidence of Nonuniformity in Urothelium Barrier Function between the Upper Urinary Tract and Bladder

J Urol. 2016 Mar;195(3):763-70. doi: 10.1016/j.juro.2015.10.066. Epub 2015 Oct 23.

Abstract

Purpose: We compared the relative permeability of upper urinary tract and bladder urothelium to mitomycin C.

Materials and methods: Ex vivo porcine bladder, ureters and kidneys were dissected out and filled with 1 mg ml(-1) mitomycin C. At 60 minutes the organs were emptied and excised tissue samples were sectioned parallel to the urothelium. Sectioned tissue was homogenized and extracted mitomycin C was quantified. Transurothelial permeation across the different urothelia was calculated by normalizing the total amount of drug extracted to the surface area of the tissue sample. Average mitomycin C concentrations at different tissue depths (concentration-depth profiles) were calculated by dividing the total amount of drug recovered by the total weight of tissue.

Results: Mitomycin C permeation across the ureteral urothelium was significantly greater than across the bladder and renal pelvis urothelium (9.07 vs 0.94 and 3.61 μg cm(-2), respectively). Concentrations of mitomycin C in the ureter and kidney were markedly higher than those achieved in the bladder at all tissue depths. Average urothelial mitomycin C concentrations were greater than 6.5-fold higher in the ureter and renal pelvis than in the bladder.

Conclusions: To our knowledge we report for the first time that the upper urinary tract and bladder show differing permeability to a single drug. Ex vivo porcine ureter is significantly more permeable to mitomycin C than bladder urothelium and consequently higher mitomycin C tissue concentrations can be achieved after topical application. Data in this study correlate with the theory that mammalian upper tract urothelium represents a different cell lineage than that of the bladder and it is innately more permeable to mitomycin C.

Keywords: kidney; mitomycin; ureter; urinary bladder; urothelium.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • In Vitro Techniques
  • Mitomycin / pharmacokinetics*
  • Permeability
  • Swine
  • Ureter / metabolism*
  • Urinary Bladder / metabolism*
  • Urothelium / metabolism*

Substances

  • Mitomycin