| Literature DB >> 32696221 |
Rabinarayan Parhi1, Aishwarya Mandru2.
Abstract
Traditionally, the skin is considered as a protective barrier which acts as a highly impermeable region of the human body. But in recent times, it is recognized as a specialized organ that aids in the delivery of a wide range of drug molecules into the skin (intradermal drug delivery) and across the skin into systemic circulation (transdermal drug delivery, TDD). The bioavailability of a drug administered transdermally can be improved by several penetration enhancement techniques, which are broadly classified into chemical and physical techniques. Application of mentioned techniques together with efforts of various scientific and innovative companies had made TDD a multibillion dollar market and an average of 2.6 new transdermal drugs are being approved each year. Out of various techniques, the thermal ablation techniques involving chemicals, heating elements, lasers, and radiofrequency (RF) are proved to be more effective in terms of delivering the drug across the skin by disrupting the stratum corneum (SC). The reason behind it is that the thermal ablation technique resulted in improved bioavailability, quick treatment and fast recovery of the SC, and more importantly it does not cause any damage to underlying dermis layer. This review article mainly discussed about various thermal ablation techniques with commercial products and patents in each classes, and their safety aspects. This review also briefly presented anatomy of the skin, penetration pathways across the skin, and different generations of TDD. Graphical abstract.Entities:
Keywords: Penetration enhancement; Physical approaches; Radiofrequency; Stratum corneum; Thermal ablation; Transdermal drug delivery
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 32696221 PMCID: PMC7372979 DOI: 10.1007/s13346-020-00823-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Deliv Transl Res ISSN: 2190-393X Impact factor: 5.671
Fig. 1Structure of human skin
Fig. 2Penetration pathways in skin
Fig. 3Different TDDS generations with their penetration enhancing techniques
List of FDA-approved commercial products and pipeline products in different clinical phases of each thermal ablation method along with their advantages and disadvantages [57–59]
| Thermal ablation methods | Commercial/pipeline products | Company | Drug | Phase in clinical trials | Application | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A. Chemical heating (iron oxide reaction/CHADD) (i) Commercial products | Synera®, Rapydan® -Iron oxide | Nuvo Research Inc., Canada | Lidocaine/tetracaine | --- | Pain | ✓ Based on types of initiator a sharp as well as slow and controlled temperature increase can be achieved | ✓ Requirement of an additional component called initiator is essential. |
| (ii) Pipeline products | a) Matrix transdermal ketoprofen-CHADD™ | Zars Pharma, now acquired by Nuvo Research Inc., Canada. | Ketoprofen | Phase-II | Osteoarthritis | ✓ The permeation enhancement may be due to thermodynamic activity and inherent molecular diffusion ability of the incorporated drug in addition to heating mechanism. | |
| b) Matrix transdermal fentanyl-CHADD™ | Zars Pharma, now acquired by Nuvo Research Inc., Canada. | Fentanyl | Phase-II | Pain | |||
B. Thermoporation (i) Commercial products | a) PassPort™ system | Altea Therapeutics Corp., Atlanta, GA | ----- | ----- | ----- | ✓ Microporation technique can eliminate the risk of blood-borne pathogens transmission due to the use of sterilizable and disposable metal filaments. | ✓ Generated excess heat can damage the deeper tissue and even induce thermohaemolysis. |
| b) Tixel system | Novoxel, Landshut, Germany | ----- | ----- | ----- | ✓ Electric field limitations may be another concern as the filaments of the device are connected electrically. | ||
| (ii) Pipeline products | a) Insulin- PassPort™ system. | Nitto Denko, Japan | Insulin | Phase-I and Phase-II | Diabetes | ||
| b) Apomorphine HCl- PassPort™ system | Altea Therapeutics Corp., Atlanta, GA. | Apomorphine HCl | Phase-I | Management of Parkinson’s Disease | |||
| c) Fentanyl citrate- PassPort™ system. | Altea Therapeutics Corp., Atlanta, GA | Fentanyl citrate | Phase-I | Acute and chronic pain | |||
C. Radiofrequency (i) Commercial products | ViaDor® system | Syneron Medical Ltd., Israel | --- | --- | --- | ✓ The microchannels are formed within milliseconds. | ✓ This technique may cause skin damage of serious nature, when there is no appropriate contact between the applicator and tissue or else the applicator is lifted. |
| (ii) Pipeline products | a) hGh-ViaDor® system | Teva Neuroscience Inc., US | Human growth hormone or somatropin | Phase-I | Growth hormone deficiency | ✓ Formed microchannels capable of sustaining the drug release in order to maintain desired blood levels. | |
| b) Teriparatide- ViaDor® system | Syneron Medical Ltd., Israel and Eli Lilly | Teriparatide | Phase-II | Osteoporosis | ✓ It helps in delivery of wide range of drugs with hydrophilic nature and macromolecules. | ||
| c) GLP1- ViaDor® system | Syneron Medical Ltd., Israel | Glucagon like peptide-I | Phase-I | Diabetes | ✓ The size and density of the microchannels can be controlled and predicted with the incorporation of feedback mechanism in the RF-assisted devices. | ||
| d) Calcitonin- ViaDor® system | Syneron Medical Ltd., Israel | Calcitonin | Phase-I | Osteoarthritis | ✓ This technique has been demonstrated as safe with minimum adverse effects as only mild erythema has been reported. | ||
| e) hPTH (1–34)- ViaDor® system | TransPharma | Synthetic human parathyroid hormone | Phase-I | Osteoporosis | |||
| D. Laser (commercial products) | a) P.L.E.A.S.E technology | Pantech Biosolutions AG, Ruggel, Liechtenstein Norwood Abbey, Victoria, Australia | ----- | ----- | ----- | ✓ This technique (fractional beam) provides large diffusion area due to ablation in several small areas at a specific depth in the target area. | ✓ The full beam damages the entire targeted area. |
| b) Epiture Easytouch™ | ----- | ----- | ----- | ✓ The ablated skin heals very fast compared with other techniques. | ✓ Photothermic mechanism leads to increase in temperature of the skin surroundings due to absorption of laser by water and other skin component. | ||
| ✓ Direct ablation (Er:YAG) resulted in minimum damage to the surrounding tissues. | ✓ The fractional amount of energy is being absorbed by the water in the skin leading to energy loss and subsequently, cauterization of small vessels. | ||||||
| ✓ Pressure waves (mechanical waves) can reversibly change the skin barrier and increase the permeability temporarily. | ✓ The recovery process photothermic mechanism is fast (within minutes) that can minimize the diffusion of drugs to the epidermis compared with CO2 and Er:YAG lasers. |
Fig. 4Lidocaine/tetracaine patch with CHADD™ technology (Synera®) (modified from reference [57])
Fig. 5Schematic representation of thermoporation. (a) Microelectrodes placed on skin, (b) microelectrodes traverse the skin and generated heat which ablated the skin, (c) micropores are formed and microelectrodes are removed, and (d) drug patch applied over the micropores to deliver the encapsulated drug (modified from references [21, 57])
Fig. 6Application of assembled PassPort™ system, consisting of applicator device, porator, and electrode array of tungsten
Fig. 7Schematic diagram of Tixel. (a) Metallic tip. (b) Handpiece. (c) Schematic representation of tip in motion and protrusion of Tixel during operation (protrusion indicates to a distance of the pins beyond the gauge, which is controlled to a desired length during tip motion operation) (modified from reference [76])
Lasers used in delivery of drug through transdermal route [96, 98, 99]
| Laser type | Wavelength (nm) | Pulse duration | Role in transdermal delivery |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ruby | 694 | 25–40 ns | Permeabilization of SC |
| CO2 laser | 10,600 | 50 ms | Ablation via vaporization |
| Er: YAG | 2940 | 250–400 μm | Ablation via vaporization |
Fig. 8Functioning of EPIMMUM™ patch. (i) Formation of micropores using P.L.E.A.S.E.® and (ii) application of patch to deliver immunogen
Different thermal ablation techniques with devices used to deliver various classes of drugs and their obtained results
| Ablation method | Formulations/device | Drugs with their physicochemical properties | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chemical heating | Carboxymethyl cellulose–based matrix | Lidocaine (MW = 234.3 Da, log | A sharp temperature variation was observed for the water as initiator compared with slow and controlled oxidation induced by oxygen. | [ |
| Patch/CHADD™ heating POD | Lidocaine and prilocaine (MW = 220.3 Da, log | Improved the drug permeation significantly. | [ | |
| Thermoporation | --- | Calcein | Optimum conditions led to 760-fold increase in calcein transdermal delivery. | [ |
| Integrated patch composed of polydimethylsiloxane patch and micro-heaters. | Glucose | Formed micropores were capable of diffusing biomolecules such as glucose across skin. | [ | |
| PassPort™ system | Interferon alpha-2b (INFa2b) (half-life = 5–6 h and MW = 19.271 kDa) | Drug delivery was improved with the simultaneous use of microporation and cathodal iontophoresis. | [ | |
| Vaccine/PassPort™ system | Recombinant H5 haemagglutinin | Enhanced immunogenicity in the mice. | [ | |
| Drug in PBS/fabricated thermal ablation device | Sulforhodamine (MW = 558 Da) and BSA MW = 66,000 Da) | Improved skin permeability of 104-fold and 103-fold, respectively | [ | |
| Tixel | Verapamil HCl (MW = 491.1 Da, plasma half-life = 2–7 h, log | Significant enhancement of drug permeation. | [ | |
| Radiofrequency | Granisetron solution in PBS pH 7.4 and diclofenac sodium in ethyl alcohol: PBS pH 7.4 (1:9)/ViaDor™ | Diclofenac sodium and granisetron HCl (MW = 348.9 Da, half-life = 3–4 h and pKa = 9.4) | Compared with passive diffusion, there were 8-fold and 30-fold increase in diclofenac sodium and granisetron HCl plasma concentration after 6 h and 24 h of study, respectively. | [ |
| ViaDor™ | Human growth hormone (hGH) (MW = 22 kDa) | 75% increase in bioavailability of hGH in rat model, whereas 33% increase of bioavailability in guinea pig, compared with subcutaneous injections. | [ | |
| ViaDor™ | Gene delivery and expression of a β-galactosidase reporter plasmid DNA | The intensity and extent of gene expression was found to be better when DNA formulation was applied prior to the application of ViaDor™. | [ | |
| ViaDor™ | Testosterone (MW = 288.4 Da, log | The delivery of testosterone-cyclodextrin complex was significantly increased and the delivery was also extended up to 24 h post device application | [ | |
| Laser | Er:YAG laser | Morphine (MW = 303.4 Da, log | There was 10 to 35-fold enhancement of all the drugs, which depends on the fluence (used at 1.7 and 2.6 J/cm2), lipophilicity, and MW of the individual drug. | [ |
| Er:YAG laser | Nalbuphine and indomethacin (MW = 357 Da, log | Flux of nalbuphine and indomethacin were increased by 73-fold and 7.5-fold, respectively. | [ | |
| Ruby, Er:YAG and CO2 | 5-fluorouracil (MW = 130.1 Da, sparingly soluble in water, and pKa = 8.0, 13.0) | Ruby laser moderately enhanced skin permeation. However, Er:YAG and CO2 enhanced skin permeation by 53- to133-fold and 36- to 41-fold higher than that of intact skin, respectively. | [ | |
| Nd:YAG laser | 5-Fluorouracil | Enhanced the skin permeation more than 182-fold compared with intact skin. | [ | |
| Nd:YAG laser | Glycerol | Glycerol permeation enhancing capacity possessed by both the modes: long-pulsed (15 J/cm2) and Q-switched (0.5 J/cm2) | [ | |
| Er:YAG laser | Antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) | Antisense oligonucleotides permeation and DNA expression were found to be enhanced by 3- to 35-fold and 160-fold, respectively, for ablated skin than that of intact skin. | [ | |
| Er:YAG laser | Peptides (MW ranged from 5000 to 8000 Da) and related vaccine (MW = 14,307 Da) | 3- to140-fold increase in peptide permeation across the partly ablated skin of mice compared with untreated skin. | [ | |
| Er:YAG and CO2 lasers | Magnesium ascorbyl phosphate | Er:YAG laser and CO2 laser enhanced magnesium ascorbyl phosphate permeation by 86.04- to 260.86-fold and 8.19-fold, respectively. | [ | |
| Er:YAG and CO2 lasers | Ascorbic acid 2-glucoside (AA2G) and 3-O-ethyl ascorbic acid (EAC) | Er:YAG laser enhanced the permeation by 35- to 78-fold and 105- to189-fold for AA2G and EAC, respectively. Whereas CO2 increased the flux by 82-fold and 181-fold for AA2G and EAC, respectively, compared with intact skin. | [ | |
| Hollow gold nanocells/Er:YAG laser | Doxorubicin (MW = 543.5 Da, log | Combination of laser and intratumoral injection showed maximum tumour necrosis compared with treatment without laser | [ | |
| 0.4% from an aqueous vehicle/Er:YAG laser | Imiquimod (MW = 240.3 and log | 0.4% from an aqueous vehicle in combination with laser treatment produces approximately same flux as commercial cream with 5% of imiquimod dose without laser treatment | [ | |
| Er:YAG and Nd:YAG | 5-aminolevulinic acid (MW = 167.6 Da and hydrophilic nature with SC/water partition coefficient = 0.1) | Drug permeation was found to be increased in laser ablated treated skin and the highest flux enhancement was found to be 200.3-fold | [ | |
| Er:YAG and CO2 lasers | Small interfering RNA (siRNA) | There were 11-fold and 12-fold increase in fluxes of siRNA for Er:YAG and CO2 laser, respectively, compared with laser-untreated skin. | [ | |
| CO2 laser | Fluorescein isothiocyanat-labelled dextran (MW = 4, 10, 20 and 40 kDa) | Improve the skin permeation enhancement of compounds of diverse MW. | [ | |
| P.L.E.A.S.E.® device | Lidocaine | P.L.E.A.S.E. ® has the ability to create well-defined pores of size (150–200 μm) in the skin, and able to enhance both the rate and extent of lidocaine permeation. | [ | |
| P.L.E.A.S.E.® device | Prednisolone (MW = 360.4 Da, and log | There was a 4-fold increase in pore numbers (450 to 1800) which demonstrated more than 3-fold increase in drug permeation and deposition. | [ | |
| P.L.E.A.S.E.® device | Diclofenac | Increasing number of pores from 150 to 900 leads to increase in diclofenac delivery from 3.7-fold to 13-fold enhancement compared with laser-untreated skin. Likewise, there was more than 3-fold increase in permeation of drug with 6-fold increase in fluency. | [ | |
| P.L.E.A.S.E.® device | 3-fluoroamphetamine HCl (MW = 189.66 Da and pka = 9.97) | Compared with passive method, there were 508-fold and 548-fold increase in drug permeation for laser-treated microporated skin and anodal iontophoresis, respectively. In addition, ablative laser technique showed minimum lag time. | [ | |
| Microparticles/P.L.E.A.S.E.® device | Pentoxifylline (relatively hydrophilic with log | Drug deposited in the micropores produces an intraepidermal depot that ensure sustained drug release without repeated microporation as well as after the closer of micropores | [ | |
| P.L.E.A.S.E.® device | Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) | Optimized HBsAg induced similar antibody titers compared with intramuscular injection of HBsAg | [ |
List of patent granted by various authorities on different thermal techniques to improve skin permeation
| S. no | Patent number | Inventor | Current assignee | Technique | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | US6708060B1 | Zohar Avarhami, Ze’ev Sohn | Syneron Medical Ltd. | RF-assisted | [ |
| 2 | US7395111B2 | Galit Levin, Meir Stern, Dorit Daniel | Syneron Medical Ltd. | RF-assisted | [ |
| 3 | US 6148232 | Zohar Avrahami | Syneron Medical Ltd., TransPharma Ltd | RF-assisted | [ |
| 4 | US7452358B2 | Roger A. Stern, Mitchell Levinson, Bryan Weber | Solta Medical Inc. | RF-assisted | [ |
| 5 | US7481809B2 | Roger A. Stern, Mitchell Levinson, Bryan Weber | Solta Medical Inc. | RF-assisted | [ |
| 6 | US4775361A | Stephen L. Jacques et. al | General hospital corp of MA, General Hospital Corp. | Laser-assisted | [ |
| 7 | WO1997007734A1 | Jonathan A. Eppstein et. al | [ | ||
| 8 | WO2001050963A1 | Kevin S.Marchitto, Stephen T. Flock | Laser-assisted | [ | |
| 9 | US5643252A | Milton Waner et. al | Transmedica International Inc. | Laser-assisted | [ |
| 10 | US20050247321A1 | Milton Waner, Charles Vestal, Stephen Flock | Laser-assisted | [ | |
| 11 | US20100292680A1 | Thomas Bragagna, Arne Heinrich, Simon Gross | PantechBiosolutios AG | Laser-assisted | [ |
| 12 | WO2006111201A1 | Thomas Bragagna et. al | Laser-assisted | [ | |
| 13 | ES2334705T3 | Christof Bohler et. al | PantechBiosolutions AG | Laser-assisted | [ |
| 14 | EP1874213B1 | Christof Bohler et. al | PantechBiosolutions AG | Laser-assisted | [ |
| 15 | US8116860B2 | Bernadette Messier et. al | Nitto Denko Corp. | Thermal ablation | [ |
| 16 | US6711435B2 | Zohar Avarhami | Syneron Medical Ltd., Transpharma | Thermal | [ |
| 17 | EP1450876B1 | Zeev Sohn | Syneron Medical Ltd. | Thermal | [ |
| 18 | WO2006004595A2 | Mark Prausnitz et. al | Thermal | [ |