| Literature DB >> 19783956 |
Yildiz Ozsoy1, Sevgi Gungor, Erdal Cevher.
Abstract
Nasal drug delivery may be used for either local or systemic effects. Low molecular weight drugs with are rapidly absorbed through nasal mucosa. The main reasons for this are the high permeability, fairly wide absorption area, porous and thin endothelial basement membrane of the nasal epithelium. Despite the many advantages of the nasal route, limitations such as the high molecular weight (HMW) of drugs may impede drug absorption through the nasal mucosa. Recent studies have focused particularly on the nasal application of HMW therapeutic agents such as peptide-protein drugs and vaccines intended for systemic effects. Due to their hydrophilic structure, the nasal bioavailability of peptide and protein drugs is normally less than 1%. Besides their weak mucosal membrane permeability and enzymatic degradation in nasal mucosa, these drugs are rapidly cleared from the nasal cavity after administration because of mucociliary clearance. There are many approaches for increasing the residence time of drug formulations in the nasal cavity resulting in enhanced drug absorption. In this review article, nasal route and transport mechanisms across the nasal mucosa will be briefly presented. In the second part, current studies regarding the nasal application of macromolecular drugs and vaccines with nano- and micro-particulate carrier systems will be summarised.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19783956 PMCID: PMC6254717 DOI: 10.3390/molecules14093754
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1(1) Paracellular route (1a) intercellular spaces, (1b) tight junctions, (2) transcellular route (2a) passive diffusion, (2b) active transport, (3) transcytosis (modified from Ref. [9]).
Commercially available macromolecular drugs applied via nasal route.
| Drugs | Molecular weight (Da) | Formulation | Commercial name | Company | FDA approval date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Desmopressin acetate | 1183 | Solution, Spray | Minirin® | Sanofi-Aventis | 1978 |
| Salmon calcitonin | 3432 | Solution, Spray | Miacalcin® | Novartis | 1995 |
| Buserelin acetate* | 1239 | Solution, Spray | Suprefact® | Sanofi-Aventis | - |
| Nafarelin acetate | 1321 | Solution, Spray | Synarel® | Pfizer | 1990 |
| Oxytocin | 1007 | Solution, Spray | Syntocinon® | Novartis | 1995 |
| Cyanocobalamine | 1355 | Gel | Nascobal® | Par Pharm Co. | 1996 |
| Cyanocobalamine | 1355 | Solution, Spray | Nascobal® | Par Pharm Co. | 2005 |
* Approved in Canada.
Studies on nasal insulin formulations.
| Polymers/Others | Delivery system | Enhancer | Animal model | Results | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Degradable starch | Microspheres | LFC | Sheep | While the relative bioavailability of insulin from microspheres was 10.7%, addition of enhancer to the formulation, bioavailability of insulin was increased to 31.5%. | [ |
| Soluble starch | Powder and Microspheres | - | Rats | A comparison between microspheres and starch powders (mw 11000 and 25000) indicated that the insoluble starch of mw 25000 and the microspheres reduced the plasma glucose level to the same extent. Besides water soluble starch powder (mw 11000) did not change the plasma glucose level. | [ |
| Crosslinked starch and Dextran | Microspheres | Epichlorohydrin | Rats | The effect on the glucose level of insulin from starch and dextran microspheres was rapid and maximum decrease in plasma glucose level was achieved in 30-40 minutes. The effect of starch microspheres was found more efficient than that of dextran microspheres to decrease blood glucose level. | [ |
| Starch- Carbopol® 974P and maltodextrin -Carbopol® 974P | Freeze-dried powder | - | Rabbits | The nasal bioavailability achieved with the application of Starch-Carbopol® 974P powder was significantly higher than that of the maltodextrin-Carbopol® 974P mixtures. | [ |
| Starch | Microspheres | Bile salt derivatives (LFC, GDC, STDF) | Sheep | Bioadhesive starch microspheres have improved transport of insulin across nasal membrane in the presence of absorption enhancers. Addition of enhancer to the microspheres has increased insulin absorption than that of absorption enhancer in solution. | [ |
| Amioca® starch and Carbopol® 974P | Powder | - | Rabbits | Following nasal single-dose application of a physical mixture of Amioca® starch and Carbopol® 974P (9/1) the bioavailability of insulin has been found to be more than 10%. | [ |
| Crosslinked starch | Nanoparticles | SGC, LFC | Rats | A rapid hypoglycemic effect has been observed with nasal application of nanoparticles. It has been emphasized that the release of insulin from nanoparticles can be modified by adjusting the degree of cross-linking. The release rate of insulin has significantly increased with combination of permeation enhancers and nanoparticles. | [ |
| Dextran | Microspheres | - | Rats | Microspheres with insulin on the surface were more effective in promoting insulin absorption than those with insulin distributed within the dextran matrix. | [ |
| Anionic resin (SPS), nonionic resins (PAE, SDBC) and cationic resin (CA) | Powder | - | Rabbits | Nasal administration of insulin mixed with anionic resin caused a rapid increase of the plasma insulin level, while nasal administration of insulin alone caused little increase. | [ |
| Hyaluronic acid ester | Microspheres | - | Sheep | Average relative bioavailability of insulin from microspheres was calculated as 11% when compared with insulin administered by subcutaneous route. | [ |
| Chitosan | Nanoparticles | - | Rabbits | The freeze-dried formulation of insulin-loaded chitosan nanoparticles has led to a greater decrease in plasma glucose level when compared to the insulin chitosan solution. | [ |
| Cross linked chitosan | Nanoparticles | - | Rats | Microspheres containing chitosan and ascorbyl palmitate caused a 67% reduction of blood glucose compared to intravenous route and absolute bioavailability of insulin was found as 44%. | [ |
| Thiolated chitosan | Nanoparticles | - | Rats | Insulin-loaded thiolated chitosan microspheres let to more than 1.5-fold higher bioavailability and more than 7-fold higher pharmacological efficacy than unmodified chitosan microspheres. | [ |
| Chitosan | Nanoparticles | CM-β-CD | - | The fast release of insulin from chitosan/CM-β-CD nanoparticles was observed (84-97% insulin within 15 min.). | [ |
| Chitosan | Nanoparticles | - | Rats | Nanoparticles containing insulin have increased the pharmacodynamic activity of the drug. The synthesis of gold nanoparticles prepared by using chitosan has used a new method, and therefore, the surface properties of chitosan were improved for binding of biomolecules. | [ |
| Chitosan | Nanoparticles | NAC | Rats | Nasal administration of chitosan-NAC nanoparticles increased the insulin absorption compare to unmodified chitosan nanoparticles and control insulin solution. | [ |
| Chitosan | Nanoparticles | SBE-β-CD and CM-β-CD | Rabbits | The nanoparticles have reversibly increased the transepithel resistance of the cells and increased the membrane permeability in in-vitro cell culture studies. Nasal application of fluorescence-loaded nanoparticles to rats has proved their ability to pass through nasal mucosa. In conclusion, insulin-loaded nanoparticles have decreased the plasma glucose level (more than 35% reduction). | [ |
| Aminated gelatin | Microspheres | - | Rats | Aminated gelatin microspheres have significantly increased the nasal absorption of insulin when administered in dry formulation but no significant hypoglycemic effect was observed when given as a suspension. | [ |
LFC = Lysophosphatidylcholine; GDC= Glycodeoxychlote; STDF = Sodium taurodihydroxyfusidate.
SPS = Sodium polystrene sulphonate; PAE = Polyacrylester; SDBC = Styrene-diviniylbenzene copolymer; SGC = Sodium glycocolate.
CA = Cholestramine; CM-β-CD = Carboxymethyl-β-cyclodextrin; NAC = N-acetyl-L-Cysteine; SBE-β-CD = Sulfobutylether-β-cyclodextrin.
Figure 2Changes of plasma glucose levels after intravenous administration of insulin solution and intranasal administration of insulin-incorporated gelatin (GMS) and aminated gelatin microspheres (AGMS) in dry powder forms. The dose of insulin was 0.5 IU/kg for intravenous route and 5 IU/kg for intranasal route (PBS-phosphate buffer saline). Each point represents mean ± SD (n = 4–5) [reprinted with permission from Ref. [64], copyright Elsevier (2006)].
Figure 3Comparative hypoglycemic effects of EE–NPs (crosslinked with epichlorohydin/prepared emulsion method nanoparticles) in the presence of Na glycocholate and lysophosphatidylcholine after nasal administration to STZ (streotozotocin) induced diabetic rats (mean ± SE, n = 5) [reprinted with permission from Ref. [52], copyright Elsevier (2008)].
Figure 4Plasma insulin (a) and blood glucose (b) concentration vs. time profiles following nasal administration of insulin (10 IU/kg) with different CPPs (0.5 mM). Each data point represents the mean ± SEM (n = 3). Key: (▲) insulin; (○) L-R8 (specific L-penetratin); (□) D-R8 (specific D-penetratin); (●) l-penetratin; (■) d-penetratin [reprinted with permission from Ref. [64], copyright Elsevier (2009)].
Figure 5Comparison of plasma concentration–time profiles following nasal administration of liquid and powder formulations, and subcutaneous administration (○) of 0.3 mg of sCT in dogs. ▲; Formulation-L (sCT in saline), ●; Formulation-PN (powder formulation with NAC and ethylcellulose). Data represent mean plasma concentrations of sCT ± S.D. (n = 4) [reprinted with permission from Ref. [74], copyright Elsevier (2006)].
Studies on the nasal heparin formulations.
| Type of heparin | Formulations | Penetration enhancers | Animal model / Human | Results | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UFH | Aqueous solution | - | Human | Heparin showed the protection with respect to nasal allergic challenge. | [ |
| UFH | Aqueous solution | - | Human | Nasal heparin showed a protective role against AMP provocation by inhibition of mast cell activation. | [ |
| UFH | Poly(L-lactic acid) microspheres | - | Rats | Nasal application of poly (L-lactic acid)-heparin microspheres had a relative bioavailability of 143% (vs nasal heparin solution). | [ |
| UFH | Chitosan nanoparticles | carboxymethyl-β-cyclodextrin | - | Heparin was released slowly from chitosan/cyclodextrin nanoparticles (8.3-9.1% heparin within 8 h). | [ |
| Enoxaparin Dalteparin UFH | Aqueous solution | Tetradecymaltoside | Rats | The addition of tetradecymaltoside into nose drops formulations containing LMWH has let to in a significant increase in the Cmax and AUC of anti-factor Xa activity compare to LMWH in saline. But the addition of tetradecymaltoside into formulations containing UFH has let to much smaller increase in the Cmax and AUC of anti factor Xa activity. | [ |
| LMWH | Aqueous solution | Dimethyl-β-cyclodextrin | Rats | Dimethyl-β-cyclodextrin was found the most effective enhancer for the absorption of LMWH. | [ |
| LMWH (Enoxaparin) | Aqueous solution | Alkylmaltosides | Rats | Alkylmaltosides improved the nasal absorption of LMWH without causing an irreversible damage in nasal mucosa. When the alkyl chains of maltosides were increased from 8 to 14 carbons, absolute and relative bioavailability of Enoxaparin were increased by two-fold. | [ |
| LMWH (Enoxaparin) | Aqueous solution | Alkonoylsucroses | Rats | The enhancers increased the bioavailability of LMWH when compared to saline solution. The potency of these enhancers was dependent on their hydrophobic chain lengths. | [ |
UFH = Unfractionated heparin; LMWH = Low molecular weight heparin.
Figure 6Changes in anti-factor Xa activity after nasal administration of enoxaparin formulated in saline or in the presence of different concentrations of (A) PEI-25 kDa, (B) PEI-750 kDa, or (C) PEI-1000 kDa. Data represent mean ± S.E.M., n = 3–5 [reprinted with permission from Ref. [91], copyright Elsevier (2006)].
Figure 7IgG antibody levels after i.n. administration of two doses of antigen (10 and 30 μg), encapsulated in chitosan nanoparticles (70 kDa) or in solution in mice (geometric mean ± SEM) [reprinted with permission from Ref. [109], copyright Elsevier (2004)].