| Literature DB >> 31878298 |
Natallia Dubashynskaya1, Daria Poshina1, Sergei Raik1,2, Arto Urtti2,3,4, Yury A Skorik1,2.
Abstract
Polysaccharides, such as cellulose, hyaluronic acid, alginic acid, and chitosan, as well as polysaccharide derivatives, have been successfully used to augment drug delivery in the treatment of ocular pathologies. The properties of polysaccharides can be extensively modified to optimize ocular drug formulations and to obtain biocompatible and biodegradable drugs with improved bioavailability and tailored pharmacological effects. This review discusses the available polysaccharide choices for overcoming the difficulties associated with ocular drug delivery, and it explores the reasons for the dependence between the physicochemical properties of polysaccharide-based drug carriers and their efficiency in different formulations and applications. Polysaccharides will continue to be of great interest to researchers endeavoring to develop ophthalmic drugs with improved effectiveness and safety.Entities:
Keywords: eye tissue regeneration; intravitreal administration; ocular bioavailability; ocular drug delivery; periocular administration; polysaccharide; topical administration
Year: 2019 PMID: 31878298 PMCID: PMC7023054 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics12010022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1Schematic representation of the anatomical structure of the eye (A). Schematic representation of drug delivery routes to the eye (B).
List of FDA-approved polysaccharides used as excipients for ophthalmological drugs [22].
| Polysaccharide | Administration 1 | Drug Dosage Form | Max Potency 2 | Brand Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alginate sodium | T | insert | 1 mg | - |
| Carboxymethyl cellulose sodium | IVT, T | suspension, injection, solution | 0.5% | Refresh Tears |
| Guar gum | T | suspension | 0.2% | - |
| Hyaluronate sodium | IVT | injectable solution | 2.3% | Healon, Amvisc, Provisc, AMO Vitrax |
| Hydroxyethyl cellulose | T | solution, suspension | 0.25–1.6% | Rohto Hydra |
| Hydroxyethyl ethylcellulose | T | solution | 0.48% | - |
| Hyproxypropyl methylcellulose | T | solution, suspension, gel | 0.1–0.6%; 2.25% (gel) | Genteal, Nature’s Tears, Tearisol |
| Methylcellulose | T | solution, suspension | 0.05–0.5% | Murocel |
| Microcrystalline cellulose | IVT | implant | 1.66 mg | Retisert |
| Xanthan gum | T | solution, suspension | 0.6% | I-Dew Ultra |
1 T—topical ophthalmic, IVT—intravitreal; 2 maximum potency is the amount of the excipient used in the approved product that is the basis for the IID listing. The potency is given in mg for ocular inserts and in percentage for liquid formulations.
Figure 2Schematic representation of different types of micro- or nanoparticles: (a) core-shell particle; (b) multidomain particle; (c) layer-by-layer coated particle with encapsulated drug; (d) liposome or polymerosome; (e) micelle; (f) self-assembled particle with conjugated drug; (g) micro/nanogel; (h) polyplex.