Results. In mice, administration of Albugranin effectively increased the number of peripheral granulocytes and mobilized hematopoietic progenitor cells for up to 5 days. The magnitude and duration of this effect were dose-dependent. In contrast, administration of Filgrastim resulted in a small increase in both cell types on day 1 only. Albugranin administered to cynomolgus monkeys caused an increase in peripheral neutrophils, with a less prominent increase in peripheral monocytes. Albugranin-induced neutrophilia peaked 24 h following each dose administration. Administration of Filgrastim daily in monkeys resulted in moderate increases in neutrophils that were maximal on days 8-12 during the course of treatment. Compared with Filgrastim, Albugranin had a longer terminal half-life (t
1/2,term), and mean residence time (MRT), and slower clearance (CL/F) in mice. The t
1/2,term, MRT, and CL/F of Albugranin following SC administration to BDF1 mice were 5.6-5.7 h, 16.7-20.7 h, and 6.37-12.2 mL/h/kg, respectively, compared with 2.54 h, 4.9 h, and 164 mL/h/kg, respectively for Filgrastim. In cynomolgus monkeys, the corresponding values of t
1/2,term, MRT, and CL/F for Albugranin were 7.73-13.3 h, 19.4-27.3 h, and 7.90-27.5 mL/h/kg, respectively, for doses of 100-1000

g/kg. An exposure-response relationship that could be empirically described with a simple E
max model with baseline was found between day 15 absolute neutrophil count and area under the curve following the first dose in cynomolgus monkeys.