| Literature DB >> 29751694 |
Phennapha Saokham1, Chutimon Muankaew2, Phatsawee Jansook3, Thorsteinn Loftsson4.
Abstract
Cyclodextrins (CDs), a group of oligosaccharides formed by glucose units bound together in a ring, show a promising ability to form complexes with drug molecules and improve their physicochemical properties without molecular modifications. The stoichiometry of drug/CD complexes is most frequently 1:1. However, natural CDs have a tendency to self-assemble and form aggregates in aqueous media. CD aggregation can limit their solubility. Through derivative formation, it is possible to enhance their solubility and complexation capacity, but this depends on the type of substituent and degree of substitution. Formation of water-soluble drug/CD complexes can increase drug permeation through biological membranes. To maximize drug permeation the amount of added CD into pharmaceutical preparation has to be optimized. However, solubility of CDs, especially that of natural CDs, is affected by the complex formation. The presence of pharmaceutical excipients, such as water-soluble polymers, preservatives, and surfactants, can influence the solubilizing abilities of CDs, but this depends on the excipients' physicochemical properties. The competitive CD complexation of drugs and excipients has to be considered during formulation studies.Entities:
Keywords: complex; cyclodextrin; poorly soluble drug; solubility
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29751694 PMCID: PMC6099580 DOI: 10.3390/molecules23051161
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Cyclodextrins with pharmacopoeia monographs.
| Cyclodextrin | n | R = H or | Abbreviation | Synonyms | Pharmacopoeia Monographs 1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| α-Cyclodextrin | 0 | αCD | alfadex | Ph.Eur., USP-NF, JPC | |
| β-Cyclodextrin | 1 | βCD | betadex | Ph.Eur., USP-NF, JPC | |
| 2-Hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin | 1 | -CH2CHOHCH3 | HPβCD | hydroxypropylbetadex | Ph.Eur., USP-NF |
| Sulfobutylether β-cyclodextrin sodium | 1 | -(CH2)4SO3− Na+ | SBEβCD | betadex sulfobutyl ether sodium | USP-NF |
| γ-Cyclodextrin | 2 | γCD | gammadex | Ph.Eur., USP-NF, JPC |
1 The European Pharmacopoeia (Ph.Eur.), the United States Pharmacopeia and the National Formulary (USP-NF), and the Japanese Pharmaceutical Codex (JPC).
Figure 1Formation of a cyclodextrin inclusion complex in an aqueous solution and self-assembly of cyclodextrin complexes.
Figure 2Types of phase-solubility diagrams according to Higuchi and Connors [11] showing how the total drug solubility changes with increasing CD concentration. A-type diagrams are formed when the drug/CD complex is soluble in the aqueous complexation media and they are usually associated with the water-soluble CD derivatives. B-type diagrams are observed when the complex has limited solubility in the media and these are usually associated with the natural CDs that have limited solubility in aqueous media. AL: linear diagram; AP: positive deviation from linearity; AN: negative deviation from linearity; BS: the complex has some but limited solubility; BI: the complex is insoluble.
The cavity size and some important physicochemical properties of natural CDs and some of their derivatives.
| Types | Substituent | 1 DS | Inner Cavity Diameter (Å) | Hydrogen Donors | Hydrogen Acceptors | Solubility (mg/mL, 25 °C) | Log P | Surface Tension (mN/m) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| αCD | H | 0 | 4.7–5.3 | 18 | 30 | 145 | −13 | 71 | [ |
| βCD | H | 0 | 6.0–6.5 | 21 | 35 | 18.5 | −14 | 71 | [ |
| γCD | H | 0 | 7.5–8.3 | 24 | 40 | 232 | −17 | 71 | [ |
| HPαCD | -CH2-CHOH-CH3 | 3.6 | 4.5–5.3 | 18 | 36 | - | - | - | [ |
| CMβCD | -CH2-CO2H | 3–5 | - | 21 | 49 | 50 | −4.9 | - | [ |
| DMβCD | -CH3 | 12–16 | 5.8–6.5 | 7 | 35 | 570 | - | 62 | [ |
| RMβCD | -CH3 | 9.7–13.6 | - | 9 | 35 | >500 | −6 | 57.5–54.1 | [ |
| TMβCD | -CH3 | 21 | 4–7 | 0 | 35 | 310 | - | 56 | [ |
| HEβCD | -CH2-CH2OH | 3.6 | - | 21 | 42 | >2000 | - | - | [ |
| HPβCD | -CH2-CHOH-CH3 | 2.8–10.5 | 6.0 | 25 | 39 | >1200 | −11 | 54.8–57.5 | [ |
| SBEβCD | (CH2)4-SO3Na | 6.2–6.9 | - | 21 | 35 | >1200 | <−10 | 71 | [ |
| HPγCD | -CH2-CHOH-CH3 | 3.0–5.4 | 8.0 | 24 | 45 | 800 | −13 | - | [ |
| SBEγCD | (CH2)4-SO3Na | 4–8 | - | - | - | - | - | - | [ |
| SUG | -SCH2CH2CO2Na | 8 | 7.5–8.3 | 24 | 48 | Very soluble | −16 | 72.2 | [ |
| G1βCD | glucosyl | 1 | 6.0–6.5 | 24 | 40 | 970 | −9 | 71 | [ |
| G2βCD | maltosyl | 1 | - | 27 | 45 | >1500 | −9 | 72 | [ |
| GUGβCD | glucoronylglucosyl | 1 | - | - | - | >2000 | - | 73 | [ |
1 DS is defined as the average number of substituents per one CD molecule; DMαCD, dimethyl-αCD; TMαCD, trimethyl-αCD; HPαCD, 2-hydroxypropyl-αCD; CMβCD, carboxymethyl-βCD; DMβCD, dimethyl-βCD; TMβCD, trimethyl-βCD; HEβCD, hydroxyethyl-βCD; DMγCD, dimethyl-γCD; TMγCD, trimethyl-γCD; HPγCD, hydroxypropyl-γCD, SBEγCD, sulfobutylether-γCD sodium salt; SUG, sugammadex; G1βCD, glucosyl-βCD; G2βCD, maltosyl-βCD; GUGβCD, glucoronyl-glucosyl-βCD.
Figure 3The effect of maltosyl-β-cyclodextrin concentration on the permeation of hydrocortisone through hairless mouse skin in vitro. The amount of hydrocortisone in the aqueous donor medium was kept constant 16 mg/mL but the maltosyl-β-cyclodextrin concentration was from 0 to 20% (w/v). Below 8% (w/v) maltosyl-β-cyclodextrin the medium was hydrocortisone suspension in water, but hydrocortisone solution in water at higher concentrations. Based on unpublished results.
In general, pharmaceutical formulations should contain sufficient CD to solubilize the entire drug dose. However, how much solubilization is needed will depend on the formulation.
| Formulation | Amount of CD | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Parenteral solutions | Sufficient to solubilize the drug dose in, for example, 10 mL of water. | Significant excess CD (as much as two to three times what is needed to solubilize the drug) is frequently included in parenteral formulations, especially those that are given intravenously. This will not affect the drug pharmacokinetics since the drug is almost instantaneously released from the complex upon dilution in the blood circulation. |
| Solid oral dosage forms (e.g., tablets and capsules) | Sufficient to increase aqueous solubility the drug dose to prevent dissolution controlled absorption. | The formulation bulk usually limits the amount of CD that can be included in solid dosage forms. For example, if βCD (molecular weight 1135 Da) is used in a solid dosage form containing 100 mg of a drug with molecular weight 250 Da the formulation bulk will be increased by over five-fold. |
| Oral solutions | Sufficient to dissolve the drug dose in the aqueous vehicle. | Excess of CD (e.g., ≥20) should be used to prevent drug precipitation upon storage and usage of the formulation. Due to formulation dilution in the gastrointestinal tract some excess CD will not hamper the drug release. However, large excess (over 50 to 100) can hamper the drug release. |
| Topical solutions with limited dilution upon administration (e.g., eye drops) | Sufficient to dissolve the drug dose in the aqueous vehicle. | Only a small excess of CD (e.g., 10 to 20%) should be used to prevent drug precipitation upon storage and usage of the formulation. Excess amounts of CD (e.g., more than 10%) can reduce topical bioavailability of the drug. |
Figure 4The phase-solubility diagram of hydrocortisone/HPγCD (a) [58] and hydrocortisone/γCD (b) [59] complex. Concentrations of the soluble drug (open circle) and CD (filled circle) are plotted against the concentration of total CD.
Effects of some pharmaceutical excipients on the cyclodextrin solubilization.
| Excipients | Examples | Effect on Complexation Enhancement | Some Brief Observations | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acids, bases, inorganic/organic salts | hydrochloride, citrate, aspartate, mesylate, maleate, tartrate, phosphate, acetate | Increase intrinsic solubility of drugs (S0) and/or the apparent stability constant (K1:1) resulting in increased CE | Salt formation of ziprasidone mesylate enhance the CE of drug up to 100 and 240 times in aqueous HPβCD and SBEβCD solutions when compared with the free base of drug | [ |
| Ternary complex of terfenadine/βCD/inorganic acid (phosphate, citrate) induce the synergistic effect of CD solubilization | [ | |||
| The addition of sodium acetate into the complexing medium containing βCD could increase hydrocortisone solubility up to 220% | [ | |||
| Enhance S0 but in most cases decrease K1:1 | K1:1 of fluasterone/HPβCD complex decreases with increasing ethanol concentration but the drug solubility increased at high ethanol concentration (>40% | [ | ||
| Cosolvents | ethanol, propylene glycol (PG) | Ternary complex of diazepam/PG/βCD increased the diazepam solubility than that of the mixture of PG and water | [ | |
| Hamper complexation by the competitive effect | At higher concentrations of PG, the methyltestosterone solubility in presence of HPβCD decreased possibly due to the complex dissociation | [ | ||
| Water-soluble polymers | HPMC, Na CMC, PVA, PVP | Formation of ternary complex (drug/CD/polymer) that can increase K1:1 | Polymers and CDs can form water-soluble complexes with poorly water-soluble drugs, for example, acetazolamide, carbamazepine hydrocortisone, naproxen, pregnenolone, tropicamide, etc. have been reviewedSynergistic solubilization effect is possible through micellar-like solubilization or stabilization of self-assembled CD and/or CD complex aggregates | [ |
| Metal ions | Mg2+ | Enhance CE by increasing S0 via formation of drug/CD/metal ion complexes | Synergistic solubilization of quinolone was obtained when the addition of Mg2+ to the drug/HPβCD complexes | [ |
Hydroxypropyl methylcellulose (HPMC); sodium carboxymethylcellulose (Na CMC); polyvinyl alcohol (PVA), polyvinyl pyrrolidone (PVP).