| Literature DB >> 23986634 |
Eder Lilia Romero1, Maria Jose Morilla.
Abstract
Vesicles that are specifically designed to overcome the stratum corneum barrier in intact skin provide an efficient transdermal (systemic or local) drug delivery system. They can be classified into two main groups according to the mechanisms underlying their skin interaction. The first group comprises those possessing highly deformable bilayers, achieved by incorporating edge activators to the bilayers or by mixing with certain hydrophilic solutes. The vesicles of this group act as drug carriers that penetrate across hydrophilic pathways of the intact skin. The second group comprises those possessing highly fluid bilayers, owing to the presence of permeation enhancers. The vesicles of this group can act as carriers of drugs that permeate the skin after the barrier of the stratum corneum is altered because of synergistic action with the permeation enhancers contained in the vesicle structure. We have included a detailed overview of the different mechanisms of skin interaction and discussed the most promising preclinical applications of the last five years of Transfersomes® (IDEA AG, Munich, Germany), ethosomes, and invasomes as carriers of antitumoral and anti-inflammatory drugs applied by the topical route.Entities:
Keywords: Transfersomes; anti-inflammatory; antitumoral; ethosomes; topical delivery
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23986634 PMCID: PMC3754763 DOI: 10.2147/IJN.S33048
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nanomedicine ISSN: 1176-9114
Figure 1A representative scheme of deformable vesicles (A), and fluid vesicles (ethosomes) (B).
Antitumoral agents
| Vesicle type/drug | Composition and structural properties | Studies | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TRS Bleomycin | EPC/NaChol (10% w/w) 150–200 nm. | Cytotoxicity on immortalized human cutaneous keratinocytes (NEB-1) and human squamous carcinoma cells (SCC). | LD50 of bleomycin-TRS was ~3-fold higher than that of free bleomycin for SCC cells and ~30 times higher for NEB-1 cells. Bleomycin-TRS at 30 μg/mL killed more than double SCC cells compared to NEB-1 cells and was similar to that of bleomycin solution. | 51 |
| TRS Bleomycin | SPC/NaChol (16% w/w) with beta-sitosterol 3-β-D-glucoside (SitG) (5% w/w) 114–53 nm, −30 mv, 28% EE. | In vivo permeation through rat skin. | Permeation of NaChol-TRS, NaChol/SitG-TRS and conventional liposomes was 4, 6 and 1% dose, respectively. NaChol-TRS and NaChol/SitG-TRS showed absorption of bleomycin into epidermis and dermis. NaChol/SitG-TRS delivered higher skin concentrations of drug than NaChol-TRS. | 52 |
| Ethosomes DTX | DTX/SPC/NaChol/EtOH/PBS (0.14/6/11/18/65% w/w) Sonicated (43 nm) and not sonicated (200 nm) 80% –88% EE. | In vitro permeation through rat and pig skin under occlusive and nonocclusive application of 100 μL on 0.636 cm2. | On rat skin, under both conditions cumulatively larger amounts and steady-state flux for DTX-ethosomes compared to conventional liposomes were shown. On porcine skin, under nonocclusive application, DTX concentration was below the limit of determination. Under occlusive application, DTX-ethosomes improved skin delivery compared to conventional liposomes and 20% w/w ethanolic solution. | 53 |
| Ethosomes PTX | PC/EtOH (1%/45% w/v) 240 ± 61 nm, ~57% EE. | In vitro permeation through human SC and viable epidermis under nonocclusive application. Cytotoxicity on DJM-1 cells. | Flux of PTX-ethosomes was 3.2- and 23.2-fold higher than PTX in physical mixture and PTX-hydroethanolic suspension, respectively. PTX-ethosomes elicited the greatest dermal accumulation. At 5 μM, PTX and PTX-ethosomes caused 40% and 90% cell death after 72 hours, respectively. | 54 |
| Ethosomes ALA | PE and PE/Chol/SS; (2:1:2.5 molar ratio) with 15% EtOH, <200 nm, −70 mv, PE/Chol/SS 66% EE, PE 10% EE. | In vivo permeation by CLSM. 100 μL was applied on 0.785 cm2 of the dorsal skin of nude mice. Irradiated at 120 J/cm2. | Penetration depth of ethosomes was higher than that of liposomes. | 58 |
| Invasomes mTHPC | SPC/EtOH/terpenes (cineole, citral, and D-limonene at 45:45:10, v/v) (10%/3.3%/0.5%–1% w/v). 150 nm, −13 mv. | In vitro permeation through abdominal human skin under nonocclusive application, 10 μL/cm2 was applied on 3.14 cm2. | SC deposition and skin depth profile of mTHPC decreased in the following order: invasomes 1% terpenes > invasomes 0.5% terpenes > ethanolic solution > liposomes 3.3% ethanol > conventional liposomes. mTHPC-invasomes with 1% terpenes penetrated into viable epidermis and dermis. | 66 |
| Invasomes mTHPC | SPC/EtOH/terpenes or citral (10%/3.3%/1% w/v). | 10 μL/cm2 was applied onto 3 cm2 of mouse skin nonocclusively 10 days after subcutaneous implanted HT29 cells. Irradiated at 20 J/cm2 on 11th and 19th day after tumor induction. | Only invasomes with 1% of terpenes led to a significantly slower increase in tumor size compared to mice without any treatment and mice treated with photoirradiation. | 67 |
| Invasomes mTHPC | SPC/EtOH/terpenes or citral (10%/3.3%/1% w/v). 120–140 nm. | Cytotoxicity on human epidermoid carcinoma cell line A431 and HT29 photoirradiation at 20 J/cm2. | mTHPC-invasomes and mTHPC-ethanolic solution reduce survival of HT29 cells and, especially, A431 cells, being more sensitive to PDT. | 69 |
| TRS mTHPC | SPC:Tween 20 (84.6: 15.4 w/w); SPC:SA:Tween 20 (81:3.25:15 w/w); SPC: dicetyl phosphate: Tween 20 (78:6:15 w/w). 95 nm, −5.5; +39 and −39 mv, respectively. | In vitro skin permeation through human abdominal skin under nonocclusive application of 10 μL/cm2 on 3.14 cm2. | SC deposition of mTHPC decreased in the following order: cationic > neutral > anionic TRS > conventional liposomes. Cationic TRS provided the highest accumulation of mTHPC in the deeper skin layers, followed by neutral and anionic TRS. mTHPC was not found in the acceptor compartment regardless of the applied vesicle formulation, indicating no risk of systemic side-effects. | 70 |
Notes: Structural properties included size (nm), Z potential (mV), and entrapment efficiency (% EE).
Abbreviations: ALA, 5-aminolevulinic acid; Chol, cholesterol; EE, entrapment efficiency; EPC, egg phosphatidylcholine; EtOH, ethanol; mTHPC, temoporfin; NaChol, sodium cholate; PBS, phosphate buffered saline; PE, phosphatidylethanolamine; SA, Stearylamine; SitG, Beta-sitosterol 3-β-D-glucoside; SC, stratum corneum; SPC, soya phosphatidylcholine; SS, sodium stearate; LD50, lethal dose 50%; DTX, docetaxel; PC, phosphatidylcholine; PTX, paclitaxel; DJM-l, human squamous-cell-carcinoma cell line; HT29, human colon adenocarcinoma grade II cell line; CLSM, confocal laser scanning microscopy; Z, zeta; TRS, Transfersomes® (IDEA AG, Munich, Germany).
Anti-inflammatory, anti-scarring, anti-atopic dermatitis and anti-psoriasis agents
| Vesicle type/drug | Composition and structural properties | Studies | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ethosomes CBD | CBD/EtOH 3%/40% w/w. CBD/SPC (1:2 molar ratio) in carbomer gel. 300–400 nm. | CBD skin permeation and organ distribution was measured in CD1 nude mice. Anti-inflammatory effect on carrageenan-induced aseptic paw edema in male ICR mice. | Accumulation of CBD in the skin and in the underlying muscle. Steady-state levels were reached at ~24 hours and lasted at least until 72 hours. Application of ethosomes on abdominal area prevented the inflammation and edema of the right hind paw. | 79 |
| Ethosomes ammonium glycyrrhizinate | SPC/EtOH 2% (w/v). 45% (v/v). 100 nm. | In vitro permeation through human SC and epidermis membranes. Toxicity, drug permeation, and anti-inflammatory activity in a model of skin erythema on human volunteers were evaluated. | Very good skin tolerability. Ethosomes increase permeation of ammonium glycyrrhizinate, and enhance the anti-inflammatory activity compared to the ethanolic or aqueous solutions of ammonium glycyrrhizinate. | 80 |
| TRS SOD | SPC:NaChol (3.75: 1 molar ratio) SOD was added to the vesicles, 150 ± 50 nm. | Epicutaneous administration on day 1 onwards post-induction of adjuvant arthritis. Prophylactically SOD-TRS was epicutaneous administered 3 days before arthritis induction. | Two SOD-TRS doses produced 53% of edema regression and an increase of the total thiol concentration in animal sera. Radiographic images showed good preservation of the joint space and soft tissues around the joint. Prophylactically, SOD-TRS was able to suppress the induced rat paw edema. | 81 |
| PEvs acid and sodium salt diclofenac | SPC (90 mg)/Oleic acid (10 mg)/Transcutol (10%, 20%, 30% v/v). 87–146 nm, −53 to −78 mv. Acid diclofenac (65% –75% EE), Na diclofenac (50%–57% EE). | In vitro permeation through new born pig skin under nonocclusive application. 100 μL was applied on 0.785 cm2. | Only acid diclofenac-PEVs showed 3-fold more elasticity than conventional liposomes. Accumulation into the skin of acid diclofenac was greater than or equal to the sodium salt. For acid diclofenac, the highest drug accumulation was found in the epidermis, 10%–20% Transcutol enhanced drug deposition three times more than conventional liposomes. Transdermal delivery was higher for the sodium salt form. | 45 |
| Ethosomes PEvs diclofenac sodium salt | PC/EtOH (90 mg/0.2 mL); PC/Transcutol (9/1 w/w); PC/PG (9/1 w/w) 100 nm, negatively charged, 52% –65% EE. | In vitro permeation through mice skin under nonocclusive application, 100 μL was applied on 0.785 cm2. Anti-inflammatory efficacy: topically applied over the same dorsal site 3 hours after phorbol ester treatment (TPA). Procedure was repeated on day 2 and 3. | Accumulation of diclofenac into the skin by Transcutol-PEVs was 3.0- and 1.6-fold higher than aqueous solution and voltaren, respectively, and by ethosomes and PG-PEVs was two-fold higher than solution and comparable to voltaren. All vesicles reduce diclofenac permeation and flux in comparison with solution and voltaren. Edema was reduced more efficiently by diclofenac-vesicles, and was practically abolished by diclofenac-PG-PEVs. Diclofenac-vesicles caused 1.9–2.7-fold decrease in myeloperoxidase activity compared to non-treated animals and voltaren treated animals. | 90 |
| Ethosomes ketoprofen | SPC/EtOH (1%–3% and 20%–40%) 120–420 nm, 45%–78% EE. | In vitro permeation through human skin. | Ketoprofen-ethosomes improved drug permeation and showed higher transdermal flux compared to hydroethanolic drug solution. | 93 |
| Ethosomes 5-FU | SPC/5-FU/EtOH and PBS ([2% w/v]/[0.4% w/v]/[30% v/v]/[68% v/v]), 65 nm. | In vitro permeation through human HS and skin, 250 μL on 2.8 cm2 under nonocclusive application. | Total amounts of 5-FU that permeated skin were: ethosomes-scar > hydroethanolic solution- scar > ethosomes-skin > Hydroethanolic solution-skin. | 32 |
| Ethosomes ALA | PE (0.13 mM) with 0.1% ALA dissolved in 15% v/v EtOH solution. | Permeation and recovery of skin in a hyperproliferative murine model, 100 μL was applied on 0.785 cm2 of the dorsal skin of mice. | ALA-ethosomes increased cumulative amounts five- to 26-fold in normal and hyperproliferative murine skin samples compared to ALA aqueous solution. ALA–ethosomes increased four-fold PpIX intensity compared to solution. Penetration depth reached 20–50 μm. | 106 |
| TRS TXG | PC/Tween 80/MPB-PE (89:10:0.5) bound to Pep-1 peptide. 130 nm, 25 mv. | In vitro permeation through depilated mouse skin. Atopic dermatitis-like lesions were induced by repeat application of 2,4,6-trinitro-1-chloro-benzene on NC/Nga mice. Mice were treated daily for 3 weeks. | TXG-Pep1-TRS increased 3.5- and 9.4-fold the amount of TXG permeated compared to TXG-Tr and TXG solution, respectively. Mice treated with TXG-solution and TXG-Pep1-TRS showed reduced TEWL within a week. TXG-Pep1-TRS treated group showed equivalent TEWL values as the normal group after 3 weeks treatment. TXG solution and TXG-Pep1-TRS led to reduction in serum IL-4 and IgE levels, and a ten-fold increase of IFN-γ. | 115 |
| Ethosomes tacrolimus | SPC/EtOH/PG (2% w/v: 30%–10% v/v: 10%–30% v/v) 90–102 nm, 76%–79% EE | In vitro permeation through Wistar rat skin under occlusive application on 1.76 cm2. Atopic dermatitis was induced by repeated topical application of 2,4-dinitrofluorobenzene on BALB/c mice. | SC deposition was equal for ethosomes and commercial Protopic. For tacrolimus-ethosomes, higher drug deposition in epidermis as compared to liposomes and Protopic was shown. Tacrolimus-ethosomes with 30% ethanol or 30% PG showed greater reduction in ear swelling than liposomes, Protopic, and dexamethasone cream. | 120 |
Notes: Structural properties included size (nm), Z potential (mV) and entrapment efficiency (% EE). Transcutol®; Gattefosse SA, Saint Priest, France. Voltaren; Novartis, Basel, Switzerland.
Abbreviations: ALA, 5-aminolevulinic acid; CBD, cannabidiol; EE, entrapment efficiency; EtOH, ethanol; HS, hypertrophic scars; MPB-PE, N-[4-(p-maleimidophenyl)butyryl]-phosphatidylethanolamine; PpIX, protoporphyrin IX; SPC, soya phosphatidylcholine; SOD, superoxide dismutase; TEWL, transepidermal water loss; TXG, Taxifolin glycoside; PE, phosphatidylethanolamine; PG, propylene glycol; CDI, immunodeficient mice; ICR, imprinting control region; SC, stratum corneum; TRS, Transfersomes; NaChol, sodium cholate; PEVs, penetration enhancer-containing vesicles; PC, phosphatidylcholine; 5-FU, 5-fluorouracil; Pep-1, cell penetrating peptide Pep-1; Z, zeta; IL, interleukin; IgE, Immunoglobulin E; IFN, Interferon; NC/Nga, inbred stain mice.