| Literature DB >> 27895934 |
Hyeji Ahn1, Ji-Ho Park1.
Abstract
Intestinal lymphatic drug delivery has been widely studied because drugs can bypass the first-pass metabolism in the liver via the lymphatic route, which increases oral bioavailability. Various lipid-based nanoparticles have been used to deliver hydrophobic drugs to the lymphatic pathway. This review focuses on the liposomal delivery systems used for intestinal lymphatic drug transport. Liposomal formulations have attracted particular attention because they can stimulate the production of chylomicrons and the incorporated drugs readily associate with enterocyte-derived chylomicrons, enhancing lymphatic drug transport. We believe that a full understanding of their contribution to intestinal drug translocation will lead to effective oral delivery with liposomal formulations.Entities:
Keywords: Chylomicron; First-pass metabolism; Intestinal lymphatic transport; Lipid; Liposome
Year: 2016 PMID: 27895934 PMCID: PMC5120490 DOI: 10.1186/s40824-016-0083-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomater Res ISSN: 1226-4601
Fig. 1Two pathways (portal vein versus lymph) of oral drug transport to systemic circulation
Fig. 2Pathways of lipid absorption and chylomicron synthesis within enterocytes
Fig. 3Lipophilic drug transport mechanisms by association with lipoproteins
Methods for incorporation of lipophilic drugs into chylomicrons
| Method | Concept | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Postprandial state | Drugs are co-administered with food. | Chylomicrons are synthesized more than those of treating any other methods. | Uncontrollable method | [ |
| Lipidic prodrugs | Drugs are covalently bound to a lipid moiety (fatty acid, glyceride, phospholipid). | Through covalent bonding with lipids, lipophilicity of drugs can be increased. | - Pharmaceutically inert | [ |
| Lipid-based nanoparticles | Administration of a single capsule of long-chain lipid can stimulate significant lymphatic transport of drugs. | - Effective carriers for drugs | The effect of the formulation on drug absorption and lymphatic transport is less clear. | [ |
Fig. 4Types of lipidic prodrug: a fatty acids, b glycerides and c phospholipids
Fig. 5Liposomes with a hydrophilic drug a encapsulated in the aqueous core and a hydrophobic drug b incorporated into the membrane