| Literature DB >> 18337027 |
Gregor Cevc1, Stefan Mazgareanu, Matthias Rother.
Abstract
We compared in vivo transport and biodistribution of ketoprofen applied on the skin in ultradeformable carriers (Diractin) or a conventional topical gel (Gabrilen) with oral drug (Oruvail); for reference we used in vitro study data. The drug from Gabrilen diffuses into body with low bioavailability (<10%) and limited regio-selectivity (AUC(deep muscle/plasma) approximately 45/0.8 (t=0-8h), reaching maximum concentration in subcutaneous tissues and plasma at similar time (t(max) approximately 3-4h). The apparent drug elimination half-life is then similar to oral ketoprofen (t1/2,a) approximately 2 h). In contrast, Diractin containing ultradeformable carriers (Transfersome vesicles) delivers the drug more efficiently (>50%) and more directly into peripheral muscles (AUC(deep muscle/plasma) approximately 447/0.7 (652/1.4) for t=0-8 (0-24)h; tmax approximately 1 h), arguably in non-diffusive fashion. Ketoprofen from Diractin moreover disappears from body periphery slower (t1/2,a) approximately 4-6 h), owing to sustained drug release from the carriers in target tissue. Final clearance always proceeds via plasma (tmax approximately 4 h). Epicutaneous application of ketoprofen in conventional gels or the carrier-based formulation thus leads to different local accumulations and clearances. Ketoprofen from Diractin achieves more desirable biodistribution and clearance, arguably due to spontaneous carrier-mediated drug transport across the skin, which ensures local and relatively long-lasting drug deposition into peripheral target tissues.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18337027 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2008.01.051
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Pharm ISSN: 0378-5173 Impact factor: 5.875