| Literature DB >> 25143734 |
Wesley Nyaigoti Omwoyo1, Bernhards Ogutu2, Florence Oloo3, Hulda Swai4, Lonji Kalombo4, Paula Melariri4, Geoffrey Maroa Mahanga5, Jeremiah Waweru Gathirwa2.
Abstract
Primaquine (PQ) is one of the most widely used antimalarial drugs and is the only available drug that combats the relapsing form of malaria. PQ use in higher doses is limited by severe tissue toxicity including hematological- and gastrointestinal-related side effects. Nanoformulation of drugs in an appropriate drug carrier system has been extensively studied and shown to have the potential to improve bioavailability, thereby enhancing activity, reducing dose frequency, and subsequently reducing toxicity. The aim of this work was to design, synthesize, and characterize PQ-loaded solid lipid nanoparticles (SLNs) (PQ-SLNs) as a potential drug-delivery system. SLNs were prepared by a modified solvent emulsification evaporation method based on a water-in-oil-in-water (w/o/w) double emulsion. The mean particle size, zeta potential, drug loading, and encapsulation efficiency of the PQ-SLNs were 236 nm, +23 mV, 14%, and 75%, respectively. The zeta potential of the SLNs changed dramatically, from -6.54 mV to +23.0 mV, by binding positively charged chitosan as surface modifier. A spherical morphology of PQ-SLNs was seen by scanning electron microscope. In vitro, release profile depicted a steady drug release over 72 hours. Differential scanning calorimeter thermograms demonstrated presence of drug in drug-loaded nanoparticles along with disappearance of decomposition exotherms, suggesting increased physical stability of drug in prepared formulations. Negligible changes in characteristic peaks of drug in Fourier transform infrared spectra indicated absence of any interaction among the various components entrapped in the nanoparticle formulation. The nanoformulated PQ was 20% more effective as compared with conventional oral dose when tested in Plasmodium berghei-infected Swiss albino mice. This study demonstrated an efficient method of forming a nanomedicine delivery system for antimalarial drugs.Entities:
Keywords: antimalarial; double emulsion; nanomedicine drug-delivery system; nanotechnology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25143734 PMCID: PMC4137995 DOI: 10.2147/IJN.S62630
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nanomedicine ISSN: 1176-9114
Change of basic characteristics of formulations in response to variation in excipients
| Formulation
| Size, nm (mean ± SD) | PDI | ZP, mV (mean ± SD) | EE% | DL% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Internal phase | External phase | |||||
| 2% PVA, no drug | 0.2% chitosan | 210.1±1.1 | 0.17±0.01 | 11.3±2.2 | – | – |
| 2% PVA, PQ | 0.2% chitosan | 256.4±2.9 | 0.18±0.02 | 19.0±2.8 | 64.1 | 15.9 |
| 2% PVA, PQ | No chitosan | 218.2±4.3 | 0.21±0.06 | −6.54±1.8 | – | – |
| 2% PVA, PQ | 0.2% chitosan | 607.5±2.4 | 0.53±0.04 | 8.14±1.3 | – | – |
| 2% PVA, PQ | 0.2% chitosan | 634.5±7.1 | 0.27±0.03 | 19.4±0.2 | – | – |
| 2% PVA, PQ | 0.2% chitosan | 236.4±2.9 | 0.14±0.02 | 23.0±2.8 | 75.2 | 14.0 |
Abbreviations: DCM, dichloromethane; DL, drug loading; EE, encapsulation efficiency; EtOAc, ethyl acetate; hg, elevated amount (10 mL of 5% lactose as opposed to 5 mL used in other runs); PDI, polydispersity index; PQ, primaquine; PVA, polyvinyl alcohol; SA, stearic acid; ZP, zeta potential.
Effect of internal to external ratio on particle size
| Formulation | Size, nm (mean ± SD) | PDI | ZP, mV (mean ± SD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1:1 | 653.7±8.7 | 0.61±0.12 | 6.60±0.13 |
| 1:2 | 236.4±2.9 | 0.14±0.02 | 23.00±2.81 |
| 1:3 | 218.6±2.1 | 0.23±0.04 | 21.90±2.02 |
Abbreviations: PDI, polydispersity index; ZP, zeta potential.
Effect of spray-drier temperature on particle size and yield
| Formulation | Inlet, °C | Pump rate | Aspirator, % | Pressure, bar | PS, nm (mean ± SD) | PDI | ZP, mV (mean ± SD) | Yield, % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SA-PQ | 70 | 2 | 100 | 5 | 256.1±2.7 | 0.23±0.04 | 18.3±2.4 | 65 |
| SA-PQ | 80 | 2 | 100 | 5 | 251.4±2.9 | 0.18±0.08 | 16.4±3.7 | 64 |
| SA-PQ | 90 | 2 | 100 | 5 | 246.3±3.2 | 0.21±0.05 | 19.3±2.6 | 62 |
| SA-PQ | 100 | 2 | 100 | 5 | 236.4±2.9 | 0.14±0.02 | 23.0±2.8 | 58 |
Abbreviations: PDI, polydispersity index; PQ, primaquine; PS, particle size; SA, stearic acid; ZP, zeta potential.
Figure 1Thermogravimetric analysis curves for the tested samples.
Notes: Heating rate = 10°C/minute, N2 atmosphere.
Abbrevation: PQ, primaquine.
Figure 2(A) DSC cooling scans; (B) DSC heating scans.
Notes: Empty nanoparticles refers to solid lipid nanoparticles that do not contain drug; Exp 1 normal refers to primaquine-loaded solid lipid; Exp 2 refers to stearic acid alone, which was used as the matrix in forming the solid lipid nanoparticles.
Abbreviations: DSC, differential scanning calorimetry; Exp 1, experiment number 1; Exp 2, experiment number 2.
Figure 3Scanning electron microscopy images of drug-loaded solid lipid nanoparticles at ×20,000 (A) and ×50,000 (B) magnification.
Figure 4Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy graphs for primaquine nanoparticle formulations. First from top (a) is formulation with 5 mL of lactose, second (b) has no drug, third (c) has 15 mL of lactose, and the bottom one (d) is free drug.
Changes in nanoparticle characteristics with respect to time
| Property | Time
| |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | After 15 days | After 30 days | After 60 days | |
| Size | 236.4±2.9 | 238.4±2.2 | 236.9±3.4 | 237.8±2.5 |
| PDI | 0.14±0.02 | 0.15±0.04 | 0.10±0.01 | 0.15±0.07 |
| ZP** | 23.0±2.8 | 24.0±1.8 | 23.2±2.4 | 21.0±3.1 |
Notes:
Size in nm, ZP** in mV.
Abbreviations: PDI, polydispersity index; ZP, zeta potential.
Figure 5In vitro release profile of primaquine-loaded solid lipid nanoparticles.
Percentage chemosuppression of test samples in suppressive test against Plasmodium berghei ANKA
| Test sample | Dosage, mg/kg/day | Average parasitemia | Percentage chemosuppression | Survival time, days |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primaquine nanoparticles | 5 | 0.8±0.1 | 98.6±2.3 | 26±2.8 |
| 2 | 1.8±0.6 | 93.5±1.9 | 23±3.1 | |
| Primaquine free drug | 5 | 2.4±0.3 | 91.3±2.4 | 22±2.4 |
| 2 | 7.8±0.9 | 71.9±1.7 | 14±2.0 | |
| Empty nanoparticles | 5 | 26.9±1.2 | 0 | 8.9±1.5 |
| Untreated group | – | 27.7±1.4 | 0 | 8.1±0.8 |
Notes: Values are expressed as mean ± standard error of the mean.
Significantly different from the untreated group (P<0.05).
Not significantly different from the untreated group (P<0.05), n=5 mice per group.