| Literature DB >> 22175030 |
Patrícia Severino1, Tatiana Andreani, Ana Sofia Macedo, Joana F Fangueiro, Maria Helena A Santana, Amélia M Silva, Eliana B Souto.
Abstract
Lipids and lipid nanoparticles are extensively employed as oral-delivery systems for drugs and other active ingredients. These have been exploited for many features in the field of pharmaceutical technology. Lipids usually enhance drug absorption in the gastrointestinal tract (GIT), and when formulated as nanoparticles, these molecules improve mucosal adhesion due to small particle size and increasing their GIT residence time. In addition, lipid nanoparticles may also protect the loaded drugs from chemical and enzymatic degradation and gradually release drug molecules from the lipid matrix into blood, resulting in improved therapeutic profiles compared to free drug. Therefore, due to their physiological and biodegradable properties, lipid molecules may decrease adverse side effects and chronic toxicity of the drug-delivery systems when compared to other of polymeric nature. This paper highlights the importance of lipid nanoparticles to modify the release profile and the pharmacokinetic parameters of drugs when administrated through oral route.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22175030 PMCID: PMC3228282 DOI: 10.1155/2012/750891
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Drug Deliv ISSN: 2090-3022
Examples of drugs, miscellaneous active ingredients and macrocyclic skeletons incorporated into lipid nanoparticles.
| Incorporated drug or substance | Lipid | Advantageous | System | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3′-Azido-3′-deoxythymidine palmitate | Trilaurin | Stable after autoclaving, and can be lyophilized and rehydrated | SLN | [ |
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| 5-Fluorouracil | Dynasa 114 and Dynasan 118 | Prolonged release in simulated colonic medium | SLN | [ |
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| Apomorphine | Glyceryl monostearate, polyethylene glycol monostearate | Enhanced the bioavailability in rats | SLN | [ |
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| Ascorbyl palmitate | Imwitor 900 and Labrafil M1944 | Viscoelastic measurements is appropriate for topical/dermal application | NLC | [ |
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| Baclofen | Stearic acid | Significantly higher drug concentrations in plasma | SLN | [ |
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| Benzyl nicotinate | Dynasan 116 | Increased oxygenation in the skin | SLN | [ |
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| Calcitonin | Trimyristin | Improvement of the efficiency of such carriers for oral delivery of proteins | SLN | [ |
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| Camptothecin | Monostearin and Soybean Oil 788 | Stable and high performance delivery system | NLC | [ |
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| Clozapine | Trimyristin, tripalmitin, and tristearin | Improvement of bioavailability | SLN | [ |
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| Cyclosporin A | glyceryl monostearate, and glyceryl palmitostearate | Controlled release | SLN | [ |
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| Dexamethasone | Compritol 888 ATO | Drug delivery topical use | SLN | [ |
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| Diazepam | Compritol ATO 888 and Imwitor 900 K | Prolonged release | SLN | [ |
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| Doxorubicin | Glyceryl caprate | Enhanced apoptotic death | SLN | [ |
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| Gonadotropin release hormone | Monostearin | Prolonged release | SLN | [ |
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| Hydrocortisone | Monoglyceride, chain length of the fatty acid moiety | SLN stable with release properties | SLN | [ |
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| Ibuprofen | stearic acid, triluarin, tripalmitin | Stable formulation and negligible cell cytotoxicity | SLN | [ |
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| Idarubicin | Emulsifying wax | Potential to deliver anticancer drugs | SLN | [ |
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| Insulin | Stearic acid, octadecyl alcohol, cetyl palmitate, glyceryl monostearate, glyceryl palmitostearate, glyceryl tripalmitate, glyceryl behenate | Promising for oral delivery of proteins | SLN | [ |
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| Ketoprofen | mixture of beeswax and carnauba wax | SLN with beeswax content exhibited faster drug release as compared carnauba wax | SLN | [ |
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| Lopinavir | Compritol 888 ATO | Bioavailability enhanced | SLN | [ |
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| Nimesulide | Glyceryl behenate, palmitostearate, glyceryl tristearate | Sustained drug release | SLN | [ |
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| Penciclovir | Glyceryl monostearate | Provide a good skin targeting | SLN | [ |
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| Progesterone | Monostearin, stearic acid and oleic acid | Potential drug delivery system for oral administration | NLC | [ |
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| Repaglinide | Glycerol monostearate and tristearin | Toxicity study indicated that the SLN were well tolerated | SLN | [ |
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| Salbutamol sulphate | Monostearin and PEG2000 | Formulation accelerate release of hydrophilic small molecule drugs | SLN | [ |
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| Tetracycline | glyceryl monostearate and stearic acid | Sustained release | SLN | [ |
Lipids used for lipid nanoparticles production.
| Lipids | References |
|---|---|
| Triglycerides | |
| Trimyristin (Dynasan 114) | [ |
| Tripalmitin (Dynasan 116) | [ |
| Tristearin (Dynasan 118) | [ |
| Mono, di and triglycerides mixtures | |
| Witeposol bases | [ |
| Glyceryl monostearate (Imwitor 900) | [ |
| Glyceryl behenate (Compritol 888 ATO) | [ |
| Glyceryl palmitostearate (Precirol ATO 5) | [ |
| Waxes | |
| Beeswax | [ |
| Cetyl palmitate | [ |
| Hard fats | |
| Stearic acid | [ |
| Palmitic acid | [ |
| Behenic acid | [ |
| Other lipids | |
| Miglyol 812 | [ |
| Paraffin | [ |
Emulsifiers used for the production of lipid nanoparticles.
| Emulsifiers/coemulsifiers | HLB | References |
|---|---|---|
| Lecithin | 4–9 | [ |
| Poloxamer 188 | 29 | [ |
| Poloxamer 407 | 21.5 | [ |
| Tyloxapol | 13 | [ |
| Polysorbate 20 | 16.7 | [ |
| Polysorbate 60 | 14.9 | [ |
| Polysorbate 80 | 15 | [ |
| Sodium cholate | 18 | [ |
| Sodium glycocholate | 14.9 | [ |
| Taurodeoxycholic acid sodium | 13-14 | [ |
| Butanol and Butyric acid | 7–9 | [ |
| Cetylpyridinium chloride | ~15 | [ |
| Sodium dodecyl sulphate | 40 | [ |
| Sodium oleate | 18 | [ |
| Polyvinyl alcohol | 15–19 | [ |
| Cremophor EL | 12–14 | [ |