| Literature DB >> 24459591 |
Shweta Gupta1, Rajesh Kesarla1, Abdelwahab Omri2.
Abstract
Poorly water-soluble drug candidates are becoming more prevalent. It has been estimated that approximately 60-70% of the drug molecules are insufficiently soluble in aqueous media and/or have very low permeability to allow for their adequate and reproducible absorption from the gastrointestinal tract (GIT) following oral administration. Formulation scientists have to adopt various strategies to enhance their absorption. Lipidic formulations are found to be a promising approach to combat the challenges. In this review article, potential advantages and drawbacks of various conventional techniques and the newer approaches specifically the self-emulsifying systems are discussed. Various components of the self-emulsifying systems and their selection criteria are critically reviewed. The attempts of various scientists to transform the liquid self-emulsifying drug delivery systems (SEDDS) to solid-SEDDS by adsorption, spray drying, lyophilization, melt granulation, extrusion, and so forth to formulate various dosage forms like self emulsifying capsules, tablets, controlled release pellets, beads, microspheres, nanoparticles, suppositories, implants, and so forth have also been included. Formulation of SEDDS is a potential strategy to deliver new drug molecules with enhanced bioavailability mostly exhibiting poor aqueous solubility. The self-emulsifying system offers various advantages over other drug delivery systems having potential to solve various problems associated with drugs of all the classes of biopharmaceutical classification system (BCS).Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24459591 PMCID: PMC3888743 DOI: 10.1155/2013/848043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Pharm ISSN: 2090-6145
Strategies for the formulation of poorly absorbed drugs.
| Technology | Potential advantage | Potential disadvantage | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conventional micronization | Known technology, | Poor control of the size distribution of the particles, insufficient improvement in dissolution rate | [ |
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| Nanocrystals obtained by ball-milling | Established products in the market, | Available only under license, secondary process required to avoid aggregation of nanocrystals | [ |
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| Nanocrystals obtained by dense gas technology | Alternative nanocrystal processing method, still room to develop new IP | Unproven technology, | [ |
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| ‘‘Solid solutions”—drug immobilized in polymer | Freedom to operate, | Physical stability of product questionable, possibility of crystallization of drug or polymer | [ |
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| Self-dispersing ‘‘solid solutions” with surfactants | Steric hindrance to aggregation built into product, amenable to extrusion | Physical stability of product | [ |
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| Nanoparticles and solid lipid nanoparticles | Controlled-release of drug, | Low drug loading, | [ |
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| Lipid solutions (LFCS Type I lipid systems) | GRAS status, simple, | Poor solvent capacity, limited to highly lipophilic or very potentdrugs, | [ |
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| Self-emulsifying drug delivery systems (SEDDS) and SMEDDS (LCFS Type II or Type III lipid systems) | Prior art available, | Surfactant may be poorly tolerated in chronic use, | [ |
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| Solid or semisolid SEDDS | Could be prepared as a free flowing powder, filled in capsules or compressed into tablet form, reduced problem of capsule leakage | Surfactant may be poorly tolerated in chronic use, | [ |
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| Surfactant-cosolvent systems (LFCS Type IV ‘‘lipid” systems) | Relatively high solvent capacity for many drugs (due to surfactant), disperses to micellar solution, reduced variability and irritancy (due to dispersion of surfactant by cosolvent) | Surfactant may be poorly tolerated in chronic use, loss of solvent capacity on dispersion, significant threat of drug precipitation on dilution | [ |
Lipid formulation classification system.
| Parameters | Increasing hydrophilic content → | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Types of lipid formulations | |||||
| Type I | Type II | Type IIIA | Type IIIB | Type IV | |
| Example/reference |
[ | [ | [ | [ | [ |
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| Triglycerides or mixed glycerides (%w/w) | 100 | 40–80 | 40–80 | <20 | — |
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| Water-insoluble surfactants (%w/w) (HLB < 12) | — | 20–60 | — | — | 0–20 |
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| Water-soluble surfactants (%w/w) (HLB > 11) | — | — | 20–40 | 20–50 | 30–80 |
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| Hydrophilic | — | — | 0–40 | 20–50 | 0–50 |
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| Particle size of dispersion (nm) | Coarse | 250–2000 | 100–250 | 50–100 | <50 |
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| Characteristics | Nondispersing | SEDDS without water-soluble components | SEDDS/SMEDDS with water-soluble components | SMEDDS with water-soluble components and low oil content. | Oil-free formulations |
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| Significance of aqueous | Limited importance | Solvent capacity unaffected | Some loss of solvent capacity | Significant phase changes and potential loss of solvent capacity | — |
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| Significance of digestibility | Crucial requirement | Not crucial but likely to occur | Not crucial but may be inhibited. | Not required and not likely to occur | Not likely to occur |
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| Advantages | GRAS status; simple; excellent capsule compatibility | Unlikely to lose solvent capacity on dispersion | Clear or almost clear dispersion. Absorption without digestion | Clear dispersion. Absorption without digestion | Good solvent capacity for many drugs; disperse to micellar solution |
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| Disadvantages | Poor solvent capacity (unless drug is highly lipophilic) | Turbid o/w dispersion | Possible loss of solvent capacity on dispersion. Less easily digested | Likely loss of solvent capacity on dispersion | Loss of solvent capacity on dispersion; may not be digestible |
Figure 1Schematic diagram of intestinal drug transport from lipid-based formulations via the portal and the mesenteric lymphatic routes. (A) Increased membrane fluidity facilitating transcellular absorption. (B) Opening of tight junctions to allow paracellular transport. (C) Inhibition of P-gp and/or CYP450 to increase intracellular concentration and residence time. (D) Stimulation of lipoprotein/chylomicron production. ABL: aqueous boundary layer; D: drug; D−: ionized drug substance; FA: fatty acid; LCFA: long chain fatty acid; ME: microemulsion; MG: monoglyceride; SEDDS: self-emulsifying drug delivery system; TG, triglyceride; TJ, tight junction.
Examples of lipids, surfactants, and cosurfactant used in commercial formulations.
| Excipient name (commercial name) | Examples of commercial products in which it has been used | References |
|---|---|---|
| Lipid ingredients | ||
| Corn oil, mono-, di-, triglycerides, | Neorol oral solution, | [ |
| Mixture of mono- and diglycerides of caprylic/capric acid (Akoline) | Avodart soft gelatin capsule | [ |
| Triglyceride of the fractionated plant fatty acids C8 und C10 (Miglyol) | Rocaltrol soft gelatin capsule, | [ |
| Capryol 90 (propylene glycol monocaprylate) | [ | |
| Captex 355 (glycerol caprylate caprate) | [ | |
| Capmul MCM L8 (glyceryl mono-dicaprylate1,2,3- propanetriol decanoic acid monoester) | [ | |
| Oleic acid/ethyl oleate | Ritonavir soft gelatin capsule, | [ |
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| Surfactants/cosurfactants | ||
| Polysorbate 20 (Tween 20) | Targretin soft gelatin capsule | [ |
| Polysorbate 80 (Tween 80) | Gengraf hard gelatin capsule | [ |
| Sorbitan monooleate (Span 80) | Gengraf hard gelatin capsule | [ |
| Polyoxy-35-castor oil (Cremophor EL) | Gengraf hard gelatin capsule, | [ |
| Polyoxy-40-hydrogenated castor oil (Cremophor RH40) | Nerol soft gelatin capsule, | [ |
| Nikkol HCO-50 (PEG 40 hydrogenated castor oil) | [ | |
| Polyoxyethylated glycerides (Labrafil M 2125 Cs) | Sandimmune soft gelatin capsules | [ |
| Polyoxyethylated oleic glycerides (Labrafil M 1944 Cs) | Sandimmune oral solution | [ |
| Labrasol | [ | |
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| Cosurfactants | ||
| Ethanol/glycerine/polypropylene glycol | Nerol, Sandimmune, Lamprene soft gelatin capsule, Nerol oral solution, Gengraf hard gelatin capsule, | |
| Polyethylene glycol | Targretin soft gelatin capsule, Gengraf hard gelatin capsule, Agenerase soft capsule, Agenerase oral solution | [ |
| Transcutol | [ | |
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| Inert adsorbents | ||
| Aerosil 200 | [ | |
| Microcrystalline cellulose | [ | |
| Neusilin | [ | |
| Dextran | [ | |
Figure 2Schematic presentation of the mechanism happening during addition of water in SEDDS. (a) Water droplets in continuous oil phase; (b) water cylinders in oil; (c) lamellar structures; (d) oil droplets in continuous phase.
SEDDSs and their potential to solve various problems associated with the drug molecule.
| BCS class | Problems proposed to be solved by SEDDS |
|---|---|
| BCS class I | Enzymatic degradation, acidic degradation, gastric irritation, gut wall efflux |
| BCS class II | Solubilization, pH dependent solubilization, low bioavailability |
| BCS class III | Enzymatic degradation, gut wall efflux, low permeability, low bioavailability |
| BCS class IV | Solubilization, enzymatic degradation, gut wall efflux, low permeability, low bioavailability |