| Literature DB >> 20156730 |
A Fischer1, J Stegemann, G Scheuch, R Siekmeier.
Abstract
In the treatment of pulmonary diseases the inhalation of aerosols plays a key role - it is the preferred route of drug delivery in asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and cystic fibrosis. But, in contrast to oral and intravenous administration drug delivery to the lungs is controlled by additional parameters. Beside its pharmacology the active agent is furthermore determined by its aerosol characteristics as particle diameter, particle density, hygroscopicity and electrical charge. The patient related factors like age and stage of pulmonary disease will be additionally affected by the individual breathing pattern and morphometry of the lower airways. A number of these parameters with essential impact on the pulmonary drug deposition can be influenced by the performance of the inhalation system. Therefore, the optimization of nebulisation technology was a major part of aerosol science in the last decade. At this time the control of inspiration volume and air flow as well as the administration of a defined aerosol bolus was in the main focus. Up to date a more efficient and a more targeted pulmonary drug deposition - e.g., in the alveoli - will be provided by novel devices which also allow shorter treatment times and a better reproducibility of the administered lung doses. By such means of precise dosing and drug targeting the efficacy of inhalation therapy can be upgraded, e.g., the continuous inhalation of budesonide in asthma. From a patients' perspective an optimized inhalation manoeuvre means less side effects, e.g., in cystic fibrosis therapy the reduced oropharyngeal tobramycin exposure causes fewer bronchial irritations. Respecting to shorter treatment times also, this result in an improved quality of life and compliance. For clinical trials the scaling down of dose variability in combination with enhanced pulmonary deposition reduces the number of patients to be included and the requirement of pharmaceutical compounds. This review summarises principles and advances of individualised controlled inhalation (ICI) as offered by the AKITA inhalation system.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 20156730 PMCID: PMC3521343 DOI: 10.1186/2047-783x-14-s4-71
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Med Res ISSN: 0949-2321 Impact factor: 2.175
Problems in aerosol therapy and their solution (modified according to [4,6,13,24]).
| Source of the problem | Type of the problem | Solution of the problem |
|---|---|---|
| Device | Low aerosol output | Vibrating mesh nebulizers |
| Aerosol distribution width | Dry powder inhalers (DPI) | |
| Variability of aerosol particle spectrum | Metered dose inhalers (MDI) | |
| Long treatment times for drug solutions | Vibrating mesh nebulizers | |
| Compound | Formulation: | Optimisation of manufacturing: |
| Chemical/physical stability | Refinement of production processes | |
| Aerodynamic diameter | Addition of stabilising excipients | |
| Adhesion force | ||
| Electrical charge | ||
| Biology: | Improvement of galenics: | |
| Permeability | Addition of absorption enhancers and | |
| Metabolism | proteinase inhibitors and packing into | |
| Safety | particles | |
| Immunogenicity | ||
Figure 1AKITA.
Figure 2AKITA.
Advantages of individualised controlled inhalation (ICI) for research and routine therapy.
| Advantages of ICI | Benefit for clinical trials | Benefit for out patient treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Reduction of side effects | Lower number of drop outs | Higher quality of life and compliance |
| Lower lung drug dose variability | Reduction in the number of patients to be included | Increase of efficiency |
| Better drug targeting | Increase of efficiency | |
| Electronic compliance control | Reduction in the number of patients to be included | Extended feedback for physicians |
| Higher drug exploitation | Lower drug costs | |
Figure 3Tobramycin lung deposition after inhalation by means of a conventional jet nebulizer system (PARI Turbo BOY with LC Plus.
Figure 4Tobramycin detection by gamma camera in one of the study patients. A - Lung deposition of 37.2 mg tobramycin after inhalation of 160 mg Gernebcin® by means of the AKITA®; B - Lung deposition of 26.4 mg tobramycin after inhalation of 300 mg TOBI® by means of Pari LC Plus®.