| Literature DB >> 30669434 |
Sam Maher1, David J Brayden2, Luca Casettari3, Lisbeth Illum4.
Abstract
The application of permeation enhancers (PEs) to improve transport of poorly absorbed active pharmaceutical ingredients across the intestinal epithelium is a widely tested approach. Several hundred compounds have been shown to alter the epithelial barrier, and although the research emphasis has broadened to encompass a role for nanoparticle approaches, PEs represent a key constituent of conventional oral formulations that have progressed to clinical testing. In this review, we highlight promising PEs in early development, summarize the current state of the art, and highlight challenges to the translation of PE-based delivery systems into safe and effective oral dosage forms for patients.Entities:
Keywords: epithelium; formulation; hydrophobization; oral delivery; permeability; permeation enhancer; safety; simulated intestinal fluid
Year: 2019 PMID: 30669434 PMCID: PMC6359609 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics11010041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Properties of selected approved peptides and their routes of delivery (source of information: Health Products Regulatory Authority (HPRA) summary of product characteristics (SPC), Drugbank, PubChem, and Welcome Compound Report Card).
| Active | Mw | Dose | Frequency | Route | t½ | LogP † | BCS | Oral BA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Desmopressin | 1069 Da | 1–4 mcg | Daily | sc | ~2.8 h | −4 | III | 0.17% |
| Octreotide | 1019 Da | 200 mcg | Thrice daily | sc | ~1.7 h | −1.4 | — | Phase 3 |
| Cyclosporin | 1203 Da | 280 mg | Daily | iv inf. | ~8.4 h | 7.5 | II | 27% |
| Vancomycin | 1449 Da | 1500 mg | Twice daily | iv inf. | ~7.2 h | −2.6 | III | Local |
| Salmon calcitonin | 3432 Da | 16.7 mcg | Daily | sc | ~1.3 h | −16.6 | — | Phase 3 |
| Semaglutide | 4114 Da | 500 mcg * | Weekly | sc | ~168 h | −5.8 | — | Phase 3 |
| Exenatide | 4186 Da | 10 mcg | Daily | sc | ~2.4 h | −21 | — | Phase 1 |
| Insulin degludec | 6108 Da | 350 mcg | Daily | sc | ~25 h | −4.9 | — | — |
| Insulin aspart | 5832 Da | 1.8 mg ** | — | sc | ~1.4 h | — | — | — |
* oral dose in clinical testing [28]; ** estimated daily dose; † estimated logP (XLogP3-AA [40]); BCS: Biopharmaceutics classification system; t½: plasma half-life; LogP: octanol water partition coefficient.
Figure 1Visual effect of Neusilin® US2 on physical state of Labrasol®. Ratio of Neusilin® US2 to Labrasol® are (a) 1:0, (b) 0.75:0.25, (c) 0.67:0.33, (d) 0.5:0.5, (e) 0.33:0.67, (f) 0.25:0.75 (Maher unpublished).
Disintegration times and break strength values for a panel of formulations containing Labrasol®, Neusilin® US2 and a disintegrant (Croscarmellose Sodium).
| Formulation Additives | Disintegrant | Tableting Pressure | Disintegration Time | Break Strength |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Labrasol and Neusilin® US2 (1:1) | 0 | 1000 | >60 | 29.1 ± 2.9 |
| Labrasol and Neusilin® US2 (1:1) | 0 | 2000 | >60 | 68.8 ± 3.2 |
| Labrasol and Neusilin® US2 (1:1) | 5 | 1000 | 5.5 ± 0.2 | 49.8 ± 6.2 |
| Labrasol and Neusilin® US2 (1:1) | 5 | 2000 | 4.9 ± 0.3 | 72.4 ± 2.7 |
Figure 2Presentation of PE and active at the small intestinal mucosa. (a) Co-localization of PE and active at the intestinal epithelium ensures that the PE is present at a high concentration and is present for long enough to alter barrier integrity. (b) A high local concentration of active provides the drive force for intestinal flux. A low release rate and more gradual dissolution of PE dosage forms, fast transit, spreading and dilution in luminal fluid and interaction with constituents of luminal fluid will impede optimal co-localization because the concentration of both are ultimately not high enough.
Potential effects of GI physiology in different animals on the action of PEs.
| Anatomical/Physiological Property | Species | Influence on PE Action |
|---|---|---|
| Gastric emptying time (h) | Human: 1 h [ | For immediate release dosage forms, slower gastric emptying in pig and dog than in humans may increase gastric residence time of PE and payload, thus overestimating enhancement. For enteric dosage forms, slower gastric emptying, may delay dissolution in the GI tract and ultimately increase Tmax in these species versus humans. |
| Gastric fluid volume (mL) | Human: 118 mL [ | For immediate release dosage forms, the larger volume in dogs may result in greater dilution of PE to below a threshold for enhancement action, thereby underestimating enhancement. |
| Stomach pH | Human: 1.7 [ | As many PEs that have progressed to clinical testing in oral formulations are weak acid surfactants, differences in solubility can be observed if there is variation in gastric pH. This gives rise to differences in enhancement as acidic surfactants are more effective in their ionizable form at high pH. |
| Small intestine transit time (Fasted state) | Human: 3–4 h [ | Faster transit may reduce the exposure of PE and payload at the epithelium, thereby reducing enhancement, and potentially underestimating the effects of the PE. A short transit time does not strictly mean faster movement, as length of the small intestine is different in different species. |
| Small intestine fluid volume | Human: 212 mL [ | Differences in fluid volume, or more specifically the volume and number of intestinal fluid pockets in the small intestine could lead to differences in the regional concentration of PE and payload, as well as differences in dissolution rate. This could lead to under- or overestimation of enhancement. |
| Duodenal mucus thickness (µm) | Human: 15.5 µm [ | Difference in the thickness of the protective mucus gel layer overlying the epithelium has potential to modulate enhancement. |
| Small intestine diameter | Human: 5 cm [ | The diameter of the intestinal lumen may impact the proximity of enteric formulations to the epithelium and ultimately impact co-localization of PE and payload. |
| Plasma membrane phospholipid composition of intestinal epithelium | Human: — | There are differences in phospholipid composition in different species [ |