| Literature DB >> 29881781 |
Karl Khandalavala1, Subhra Mandal2, Rachel Pham1, Christopher J Destache2, Annemarie Shibata1.
Abstract
HIV continues to be one of the greatest challenges facing the global health community. More than 36 million people currently live with HIV and, in 2015 2.1 million new infections were reported globally. Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) prevents HIV infection by inhibiting viral entry, replication, or integration at the primary site of pathogenic contraction. Failures of large antiretroviral drug (ARV) PrEP clinical trials indicate the current insufficiencies of PrEP for women in high-risk areas, such as sub-Saharan Africa. A combination of social, adherence, and drug barriers create these insufficiencies and limit the efficacy of ARV. Nanotechnology offers the promise of extended drug release and enhances bioavailability of ARVs when encapsulated in polymeric nano-particles. Nanoparticle encapsulation has been evaluated in vitro in comparative studies to drug solutions and exhibit higher efficacy and lower cytotoxicity profiles. Delivery systems for nanoparticle PrEP facilitate administration of nano-encapsulated ARVs to high-risk tissues. In this mini-review, we summarize the comparative nanoparticle and drug solution studies and the potential of two delivery methods: thermosensitive gels and polymeric nanoparticle films for direct prophylactic applications.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29881781 PMCID: PMC5987555 DOI: 10.15436/2377-1372.17.1583
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nanotechnol Mater Sci ISSN: 2377-1372
Nanoparticle encapsulated ARV for PrEP in vivo and in vitro using film and gel delivery modalities.
| Prophylactic Modality | ARV | Drug Target | Drug Target | EE% | Level of Study | Duration of measurement | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PLGA/SA | TFV | NRTI | Film | AE: 53.5% ± 4.9% | SVF | 24 h | PLGA/SA-TFV-Film sustained drug release (60% released in 24 hrs) (71) |
| PLGA | IQP-0528 | NNRTI/EI | Film | NR | Macaques | 24 h | |
| PLGA | EFV-Free | NNRTI-NRTI | Film | 96.8 ± 2.5% | Female CD-1 Mice | 24 h | |
| SLS-PCL | DAP | NNRTI | NP Solution | 97.6% ± 0.4% | TZM/PBMC/Mo-DC--T4 | 14 d | TZM-bl: no EC50 difference; PBMC: 6.8-fold decrease EC50; Mo-DC: 12.6-fold EC50 decrease; moderate |
| CTAB-PCL | DAP | NNRTI | NP Solution | 97.9% ± 0.3% | TZM/PBMC/Mo-DC--T4 | 14 d | TZM-bl: no EC50 difference; PBMC: 6.3-fold decrease EC50; Mo-DC:12-fold decrease EC50; high cytotoxicity in all |
| PEO-PCL | DAP | NNRTI | NP Solution | 97.6% ± 0.1% | ICR mice-topical | 24 h | TZM-bl: no EC50 difference; PBMC: 3.8-fold decrease EC50; Mo-DC: 6.81-fold EC50 decrease; |
| PLGA | EFV-LPV/r | NNRTI-PI/PI | NP Solution | EFV: 79.5%, LPV: 79.8%, RTV:81% | TZM-bl indicator cells | 48 h | Similar IC50 in combination NP than for each drug solution separately (42) |
| PLGA | EFV | NNRTI | NP Solution | 44.5% ± 2.7% | TZM-bl indicator cells | 48 h | IC50: 54.6-fold decrease (35) |
| PLGA | SQV | PI | NP Solution | 43.8% ± 15.2% | TZM-bl indicator cells | 48 h | IC50: 1.65-fold decrease (35) |
| PLGA | MVC-ETR-RAL | EI-NNRTI-IS-TI | NP Solution | 91.0 ± 9.9, 16.8 ± 2.6, 12.0 ± 0.6 | TMZ-bl indicator cells | 48 h | IC50: 8-fold decrease in combination treatment relative to the free drugs in combination with one another (36) |
| PLGA | FTC | NRTI | NP Solution | EE: 50.6 ± 5.5% | TMZ-bl indicator cells | 24 h | 43-fold decrease in IC50 in the PLGA-FTC compared to the FTC solution (32) |
| PLGA | RPV | NNRTI | TMS | 98 ± 0.7% | Hu-BLT Mice-Topical | 7–8 weeks | 50% protection n = 12 (65) |
| PLGA | TDF | NNRTI | TMS | 52.9% | Hu-BLT mice-topical | 4 weeks | 100% protection 4,24, all infected at 7day time pt. (67) |
| CAP | EFV | NNRTI | TMS | EE: 98.1% ± 1.2% | TMZ-bl indicator cells | 3 d | Combination NP significantly higher % antiviral activity compared to EFV solution at same concentration. (57) |
32, 35, 36, 42, 46, 47, 57, 65, 67, 70–72
Encapsulation Efficiency = [(Drugmeasured)/(Drugfabrication)]*100
Association Efficiency = [(DrugFabrication − Drugmeasured)/(DrugFabrication)]
Figure 1Fabrication of thermosensitive gel with NP-encapsulated ARVs for vaginal application of PrEP to high-risk tissues. ARVs encapsulated in polymeric nano-particles using oil-in-water emulsion technique with the organic phase comprised of ARVs, DMSO, N-methyl-pyrrolidone, and ethyl acetate emulsified in ultrapure water. ARV-NPs are prepared in a citrate buffer with the addition of Plurionic F127 and F68 at a 20:1 ratio to the buffer for gelation. The solution is set overnight in a cooled environment. pH modifications are made for CAP-NP and PLGA-ARV-NP fabrications along with glycerol addition. Black-NPs, Red: ARVs, Blue: polymer[.
Abbreviations.
| Abbreviation | Name |
|---|---|
| ART | Anti-retroviral therapy |
| ARV | Anti-retroviral |
| AZT/ZDV | Zidovudine (NRTI) |
| EFV | Efavirenz (NNRTI) |
| 3CT | Lamivudine (NRTI) |
| LMV | Lamivudine (NRTI) |
| Lf | Lactoferrin (NP) |
| PEO | Poly(ethylene oxide) |
| PCL | Poly(ε-caprolactone) |
| Hu-BLT | humanized bone marrow-liver-thymus mice |
| PLGA | Poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) |
| TDF | Tenofovirdisoproxilfumarate (NRTI) |
| TFV | Tenofovir (NRTI) |
| LPN/r | Lopinavir/ritonavir PI |
| PI | Protease Inhibitror |
| IN | Integraseinihibitor |
| SQV | Saquinavir (PI) |
| MVC | Maraviroc (Entry inhibt) |
| ETR | Etravirine (NNRTI) |
| RAL | Raltegravir (IN) |
| TMS | Thermosensitive Gel |
| CAP | Cellulose Acetate Phthalate |
| FTC | Emtricitabine (NRTI) |
| RPV | Rilpivirine (NNRTI) |
| Dapivirine | Dapivirine (NNRTI) |
| EI | Entry Inhibitor |
| DAP | Dapivirine |