| Literature DB >> 20046732 |
Abstract
Till recent, injections remained the most common means for administering therapeutic proteins and peptides because of their poor oral bioavailability. However, oral route would be preferred to any other route because of its high levels of patient acceptance and long term compliance, which increases the therapeutic value of the drug. Designing and formulating a polypeptide drug delivery through the gastro intestinal tract has been a persistent challenge because of their unfavorable physicochemical properties, which includes enzymatic degradation, poor membrane permeability and large molecular size. The main challenge is to improve the oral bioavailability from less than 1% to at least 30-50%. Consequently, efforts have intensified over the past few decades, where every oral dosage form used for the conventional small molecule drugs has been used to explore oral protein and peptide delivery. Various strategies currently under investigation include chemical modification, formulation vehicles and use of enzyme inhibitors, absorption enhancers and mucoadhesive polymers. This review summarizes different pharmaceutical approaches which overcome various physiological barriers that help to improve oral bioavailability that ultimately achieve formulation goals for oral delivery.Entities:
Keywords: Therapeutic proteins and peptides; absorption enhancers; enzyme inhibitors; formulation vehicles; mucoadhesive polymeric system; oral delivery
Year: 2008 PMID: 20046732 PMCID: PMC2792531 DOI: 10.4103/0250-474X.42967
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Pharm Sci ISSN: 0250-474X Impact factor: 0.975
VARIOUS PHARMACEUTICAL APPROACHES AND THEIR OUTCOMES
| Approaches | Outcomes |
|---|---|
| Chemical modification | |
| a) Amino acid odification | Improves enzymatic stability. |
| b) Hydrophobization | Improve membrane penetration |
| Use of enzyme inhibitors | Resist degradation by enzymes present in stomach and intestine |
| Use of absorption enhancers | Increases membrane permeability |
| Formulation vehicles | |
| a) Emulsions | Protects drug from acid and luminal proteases in the GIT. Enhance permeation through intestinal mucosa |
| b) Microspheres | Prevents proteolytic degradation in stomach and upper portion of small intestine. Restricts release of drug to favorable area of GIT |
| c) Nanoparticles | Prevent enzymatic degradation. Increases intestinal epithelial absorption |
| d) Liposomes | Improves physical stability. Increases membrane permeability. |
| Mucoadhesive polymeric system | Achieve site-specific drug delivery. Improves membrane permeation. |