| Literature DB >> 32899548 |
Adrian H Teruel1,2, Isabel Gonzalez-Alvarez3, Marival Bermejo3, Virginia Merino1,4, Maria Dolores Marcos1,2,5, Felix Sancenon1,2,5, Marta Gonzalez-Alvarez3, Ramon Martinez-Mañez1,2,5.
Abstract
Colonic Drug Delivery Systems (CDDS) are especially advantageous for local treatment of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). Site-targeted drug release allows to obtain a high drug concentration in injured tissues and less systemic adverse effects, as consequence of less/null drug absorption in small intestine. This review focused on the reported contributions in the last four years to improve the effectiveness of treatments of inflammatory bowel diseases. The work concludes that there has been an increase in the development of CDDS in which pH, specific enzymes, reactive oxygen species (ROS), or a combination of all of these triggers the release. These delivery systems demonstrated a therapeutic improvement with fewer adverse effects. Future perspectives to the treatment of this disease include the elucidation of molecular basis of IBD diseases in order to design more specific treatments, and the performance of more in vivo assays to validate the specificity and stability of the obtained systems.Entities:
Keywords: colon; drug delivery; inflammatory bowel diseases; intestinal permeability
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32899548 PMCID: PMC7555849 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21186502
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Key cell populations and mediators of bowel homeostasis and pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease. DC—dendritic cells, IEC—intestinal epithelium cells, ILC—innate lymphoid cells, Mφ—macrophages, sIgA—secreted IgA, Th—T helper cells, and Treg—T-cell regulating. Adapted from Mathisen [9].
Figure 2Gastrointestinal tract (GIT) affected by the Inflammatory Bowel Disease. Left—GIT showing ulcerative colitis. Right—GIT showing Crohn’s disease.
Figure 3Chemical structures of the aminosalicylate drugs 5-ASA, sulfasalazine, balsalazide, and olsalazine.
Oral colonic drug delivery systems (CDDS) following pH-sensitive approach.
| Approach/Mechanism | Dosage Form | Description | Drug Loaded | In Vitro Model | In Vivo Model | Year/Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| pH-responsive | Nanofibers: Polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP). | Diclofenac encapsulated in a hydrophilic nanocomposite coated with a thin shellac layer. The nanosystem was obtained using a modified coaxial electrospinning method and showed specificity and pulsatile colon delivery. | Diclofenac sodium | Drug release studies in buffered solutions at different pH and ex vivo permeation studies. | - | 2018 [ |
| pH-responsive | NPs: Eudragit FS30D/PLGA nanoparticles | Nanoparticles of cyclosporine A encapsulated with Eudragit FS30D nanoparticles (ENPs), PLGA nanoparticles (PNPs), and Eudragit FS30D/PLGA nanoparticles (E/PNPs) were synthetized. In vivo assays using a mouse model of colitis, showed a significant improvement of the symptoms of the pathology | Cyclosporine A | Drug release studies in buffered solutions at different pH. | Mice | 2018 [ |
| pH-responsive | Microcrystals: Chitosan/alginate/Eudragit S multilayers | Dexamethasone microcrystals coated with different layers: chitosan, alginate, and Eudragit S 100 (ES) allows a pH-dependent dexamethasone release, providing an important drug release in colon segment. The formulation shows therapeutic activity in an in vivo mouse model of ulcerative colitis. | Dexamethasone | Drug release studies in buffered solutions at different pH. | Mice | 2018 [ |
| pH-responsive | NPs: Chitosan based polymeric nanomicelles | pH-sensitive nanomicelles of curcumin coated with N-naphthyl-N,O-succinyl chitosan (NSCS) and N-octyl-N,O- succinyl chitosan (OSCS) allow colon-targeted drug delivery. | Curcumin | Drug release studies with simulated GIT fluids. Cytotoxicity: | - | 2018 [ |
| pH-responsive | Nanostructured lipid carrier (NLCs) systems coated with Eudragit S100 | Budesonide loaded nanostructured lipid carriers obtained by high pressure homogenization technique and coated with Eudragit® S100 prevent release of drug at acidic pHs. | Budesonide (BDS) | Drug release studies in buffered solutions at different pH. | - | 2018 [ |
| pH-responsive | NPs: Mesoporous nanoparticles capped with (1) a molecule containing a disulfide bond, (2) a starch derivative or (3) a lipid bilayer. | Gated mesoporous nanoparticles able to deliver their cargo triggered by different stimuli such as redox ambient, enzymatic hydrolysis, and presence of surfactant or contact with cell membrane) allow an increase of drug release and drug concentration in intestine and colon reducing plasma drug levels. | Safranin O | Drug release studies with simulated GIT fluids. Cytotoxicity & permeability: | Wistar rats | 2017 [ |
| pH-responsive | MPs: Alginate hydrogel/chitosan micelle composites | pH-sensitive drug delivery systems based on the cross-linked unimolecular micelles dispersed in a hydrogel matrix at different ratios. The hydrogel/micelle (3:1) showed a colon-specific release. The release of drug from these formulations is a complex process that involves several mechanisms simultaneously. | Emodin | Drug release studies with simulated GIT fluids. | - | 2018 [ |
| pH-responsive | Alginate microparticles | pH-sensitive drug delivery microparticles of puerarin in order to reduce the complications associated to ulcerative colitis | Puerarin | Drug release studies with simulated GIT fluids | Mice | 2019 [ |
| pH-responsive | MPs: P(LE-IA- MEG) hydrogel microspheres obtained using emulsion crosslinking method with itaconic acid, poly (ethylene glycol) methyl ether methacrylate and PLE-AC (a new polymer obtained from poly (ethylene glycol) methyl ether methacrylate and acryloyl choride) | pH-sensitive hydrogel microspheres as a drug carrier of hydrocortisone have been obtained. The in vitro assays showed that the microspheres are pH-sensitivity. In vivo assays carried out on a mice colitis model indicate that mice treated with microspheres exhibited more therapeutic effects than those treated with free hydrocortisone. | Hydrocortisone sodium succinate | Drug release studies in buffered solutions at different pH. | Mice | 2018 [ |
| pH-responsive | Tablet of aloe vera polysaccharide/Acrylonitrile nanoparticles + guar gum + drug | Self-assembled nanoparticles with aloe vera polysaccharide and acrylonitrile loaded with 5-ASA were synthetized. The resulting allows the cargo delivery at colonic pH. | 5-ASA | Drug release studies in buffered solutions at different pH. | - | 2018 [ |
| pH-responsive | Eudragit microparticles | Celecoxib microparticles formulated using Eudragit S100, Eudragit L100-55 or Eudragit L100 | Celecoxib | In vitro and in vivo assays | Rat model | 2016 [ |
| pH-responsive | ColoPulse coated tablets | Sustained-release budesonide tablets coated with ColoPulse | Budesonide | In vitro and in vivo assays | Human | 2019 [ |
| pH-responsive | ColoPulse coated tablets | Sustained-release infliximab tablets coated with ColoPulse | Infliximab | In vitro assays | 2019 [ |
Oral CDDS following the enzyme-sensitive approach.
| Approach/Mechanism | Dosage Form | Description | Drug Loaded | In Vitro Model | In Vivo Model | Year/Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enzyme-responsive | Microparticles: Starch film-coated | Microparticles loaded with 5-ASA coated with a resistant starch films prepared with different techniques showed an important enzymatic resistance. In vivo studies indicated that formulation orally administered resist acidic medium and delivered drug in colon | 5-ASA | - | Healthy mice | 2018 [ |
| Enzyme-responsive | Microspheres: guar gum and xanthan gum | 5-ASA encapsulated in microspheres with guar gum and xanthan gum was combined with probiotics such as | 5-ASA | - | Wistar rats. | 2017 [ |
| Enzyme-responsive | MPs: Mesoporous silica microparticles capped with a bulky azo derivative | Gated silica microparticles loaded with the dye safranin O were prepared and characterized. Microparticles release takes place under reducing conditions typical of the colonic mucosa. Preliminary in vivo experiments using healthy mice indicate that solid release the dye in the last part of GIT mucosa. | Safranin O | Drug release studies in buffered solutions at different pH (with/without enzyme stimuli). | Healthy mice | 2018 [ |
| Enzyme-responsive | MPs: Magnetic mesoporous silica microparticles capped with a bulky azo derivative | Magnetic micro-sized mesoporous silica particles loaded with safranin O and functionalized with an azo derivative allow colon-targeted delivery. Controlled release assays were carried out using simulated digestion process. | Safranin O | Drug release studies with simulated GIT fluids. | - | 2018 [ |
| Enzyme-responsive | NPs: Star-shape amphiphilic polymer of polycaprolactone (PCL), olsalazine, and methoxypolyethylene glycols (mPEG). | Azo four-arm polymeric micelles for colon-targeted delivery of dimethyl fumarate can be use in colon cancer therapy. In vitro drug release assays indicated that the cumulative drug release from the polymeric micelles was lower than 20% in the gastric fluid of rats within 10 h. However release in colonic fluids of drugs reached 100% in the same period of time | Dimethyl fumarate | LIVE/DEAD® Viability/Cytotoxicity Assay Kit—Colon cancer cell lines CT26, HT29, and HCT116 cells. | - | 2016 [ |
| Enzyme-responsive | MPs: Calcium pectinate gel beads | Low methyl-esterified pectins microparticles were used as the carriers for colon delivery of prednisolone. Release aspects of prednisolone in the simulated gastric (pH 1.25), intestinal (pH 7.0) and colonic (pH 7.0 + pectinase) media were investigated. Prednisolone release occurred in a larger extent in colonic medium due to the enzymatic erosion of the beads. | Prednisolone | Drug release studies with simulated GIT fluids. | - | 2016 [ |
| Enzyme-responsive | Pellets | 5-ASA pellets coated with Nutriose: ethylcellulose 1:4 or peas starch:ethylcellulose 1:2 blends were synthetized. In vivo assays in a rat model revealed the efficacy of these colon targeting pellets. | 5-ASA | - | Wistar rats | 2015 [ |
| Enzyme-responsive | NPs: MSNs guar gum capping (GG-MSN) | In vitro release studies of 5-Fluorouracil loaded mesoporous nanoparticles capped with guar gum allow drug release specifically triggered by colonic enzymes. The released drug produced cytostatic effect in cells cultured with simulated colonic microenvironment | 5FU | Drug release studies with simulated GIT fluids | - | 2017 [ |
| Enzyme-responsive | NPs: Amphiphilic curcumin polymer (PCur) | An amphiphilic curcumin polymer conjugate containing a hydrophilic poly(ethylene glycol) and hydrophobic curcumin linked by disulfide bond was designed to release curcumin in the intestinal reduction environment. The results obtained from in vitro and in vivo assays confirmed higher therapeutic level of curcumin in intestinal tissue damaged. | Curcumin | Drug release studies in buffered solutions at different pH and reductive environment. | Sprague–Dawley (SD) rats and C57BL/6 mice | 2017 [ |
| Enzyme-responsive | Tablets: Chitosan-laurate coating | Chitosan-laurate dispersions were used as coating films of acetaminophen tablets. Results indicate that formulation was stable in acidic environment and allow drug delivery in the colon tissues. | Acetaminophen | Drug release studies in buffered solutions at different pH (with/without enzyme stimuli). | - | 2015 [ |
Oral CDDS following inflammation targeting and ROS-responsive approach.
| Approach/Mechanism | Dosage Form | Description | Drug Loaded | In Vitro Model | In Vivo Model | Year/Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inflammation targeting | NPs: An oxidation-responsive β-cyclodextrine nanoparticles loaded with Templol (Tpl/OxbCD) | An oxidation-responsive β-cyclodextrine (OxbCD) nanoparticles was obtained and loaded with tempol (Tpl). The drug release from formulation is allowed by hydrolysis of OxbCD NPs by means of hydrogen peroxide. Oral administration of nanoparticles allows to obtain increased amounts of drug in colon and less biodistribution in other organs. The efficacy was better than free drug or other tested formulations used as control | Tempol (Tpl): | ROS-sensitivity, hydrolysis and drug release evaluation in buffered solutions at different pH. | Mice | 2016 [ |
| Inflammation targeting | NPs: PLGA | PLGA NPs loaded with siCD98 and curcumin demonstrated that codelivery of both drugs increase the efficacy of colitis treatment. This structurally simple platform is suitable for orally administered delivery of drugs to target colon for ulcerative colitis or other pathologies | CD98 siRNA and curcumin | - | Mice | 2016 [ |
| Inflammation targeting | NPs: | Archeolipid nanoparticles loaded with dexamethasone are synthetized and characterized | Dexamethasone | Anti-inflammatory activity: | - | 2017 [ |
| Inflammation targeting | NPs: PLGA and amphiphilic copolymer Polylactic acid-Polyethylene glycol-Folate (PLGA/PLA- PEG-FA) nanoparticles | PLGA/PLA-PEG-FA nanoparticles containing 6-shogaol are a promising formulation because its effectivity in targeting colitis tissue, improving symptoms and accelerating wound repair. | 6-shogaol | - | Mice | 2018 [ |
| Inflammation targeting | NPs: ginseng-derived nanoparticles (GDNPs 2) | GDNPs 2 nanoparticles ability for controlled and it is an optimal option for ulcerative colitis prevention and treatment due to its effectivity in colon-targeted, low toxicity and easy production. | Lipids, proteins, microRNAs and ginger bioactives | Internalization and citotoxicity: | Mice | 2016 [ |
| Inflammation targeting | NPs: PLGA nanocarriers | PLGA nanocarriers loaded with cyclosporine A have demonstrated to be useful as drug delivery system, targeting inflamed issues, providing high drug concentrations at inflamed tissues, demonstrating superior efficacy and safety in a relevant preclinical mouse model in vivo. | Cyclosporine A | Drug release studies with simulated gastric fluid (pH = 3.0). | Balb/C mice | 2017 [ |
| Inflammation targeting | NPs: Cationic lipid-assisted nanoparticles (CLAN) | Cationic lipid-assisted nanoparticles loaded with Tacrolimus (FK506) are tested as drug delivery system for ulcerative colitis treatment | Tacrolimus (FK506) | Drug release studies in buffered solutions at different pH. | C57BL/6 mice | 2018 [ |
| Inflammation targeting (ROS-responsive) | NPs: Self-assembling | Redox nanoparticles (RNPO) administered by oral route specifically accumulated in inflamed tissues and scavenged reactive oxygen species (ROS) demonstrating the potential therapeutic of this approach. | Tempol (Tpl): | Cellular uptake: | Mice | 2015 [ |
| Inflammation targeting (ROS-responsive) | NPs: Superoxide dismutase (SOD)/catalase mimetic nanosystem | An oxidation-responsive ß-cyclodextrin material (OxbCD) was synthesized, and loaded with the ROS scavenger Tempol. Hydrogen peroxide presence promote the on-demand release of loaded drug. In vivo assays revealed that nanoparticles accumulate in the inflamed tissues after oral delivery. | Tempol (Tpl): | Drug release studies in buffered solutions at different pH + hydrogen peroxide. | DSS induced acute and chronic colitis. | 2016 [ |
| Inflammation targeting (redox-responsive) | NPs based on 4-aminothiophenol-carboxymethyl inulin conjugate | Budesonide loaded nanoparticles based on an amphiphilic inulin derivative (ATP-CMI) were obtained. In vitro release and in vivo assays indicate that this formulation can be a promising option for colitis treatment. | Budesonide | Drug release studies with simulated GIT fluids. Cytotoxicity: | Mice | 2018 [ |
| Inflammation targeting | Nanoemulsion: Self-nanoemulsifying drug delivery system (SNEDDS) | Self-nanoemulsifying formulation that contains medium-chain triglycerides oil (MCT oil), Solutol HS-15 (surfactant), propylene glycol (co-surfactant) and Bruceine D is able to show high therapeutic effectivity in a colitis animal model. | Bruceine D | Drug release studies in buffered solutions at different pH. | Sprague Dawley rats | 2018 [ |
| Inflammation targeting | NPs: Broccoli-Derived Nanoparticles | Nanoparticles based on broccoli extracts have demonstrated to protect mice against colitis Assays have been carried out using three mouse colitis models and preliminary studies indicate that activation of adenosine monophosphate- activated protein kinase (AMPK) in dendritic cells (DCs) play an important role y in prevention. | BDN | - | 1. Adoptive T cell transfer chronic colitis. | 2017 [ |
Oral CDDS following dual or combined approaches.
| Approach/Mechanism | Dosage Form | Description | Drug Loaded | In Vitro Model | In Vivo Model | Year/Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dual pH-/time-responsive | NPs: | Loaded budesonide nanoparticles using Eudragit® FS30D as a pH-responsive polymer, and Eudragit® RS100 as a time-dependent controlled release polymer were obtained in order to reach release at a colonic pH. In vivo assays confirmed that the dual approach pH/time-dependent is useful to obtain colon specific delivery and to enhance the efficacy of budesonide treatment. | Budesonide | Drug release studies in buffered solutions at different pH. | Mice | 2015 [ |
| Swelling properties & enzyme-responsive | Microspheric vehicle: | Microspheric particles obtained with cationic konjac glucomannan phytagel are able to target colonic macrophages and suppress the local expression of TNF-α by specific delivery of antisense oligonucleotide anti-TNFα, providing excellent results in the in vivo assays using a colitis mice model. | Antisense oligonucleotide anti-TNFα | Drug release studies in buffered solutions at different pH. | Mice | 2015 [ |
| Dual pH-/time-responsive | ColoPulse coated tablet (croscarmellose sodium enhance disintegration) | Infliximab incorporated in a sugar glass matrix showed activity compared to a fresh infliximab solution and demonstrated advantages such as high stability and targeted colon delivery | Infliximab | Drug release studies in buffered solutions at different pH. | - | 2016 [ |
| Dual pH-/enzyme-responsive | Microspheres: polyacrylamide-graft-gum karaya pH-sensitive spray dried microspheres (PAAm-g-GK) | Microspheres based on pH-sensitive PAAm-g-GK copolymer having cross-linked with glutaraldehyde and loaded with capecitabine are used as drug carriers to target colon tissue. In vitro results indicate that, after 5h later to star the assay, it is observed an important drug release because of colonic bacteria’s action on PAAm-g-GK copolymer contained in fecal contents medium accelerated drug delivery. | Capecitabine | Drug release studies with simulated GIT fluids and rat cecal contents. | - | 2017 [ |
| Dual pH-/enzyme-responsive | Nanocomposite hydrogel based on graphene oxide pH-sensitive and biocompatible graphene oxide (GO) containing azoaromatic crosslinks and poly (vinyl alcohol) (PVA) (GO–N = N–GO/PVA) | Nanocomposite hydrogel based on graphene oxide, azoaromatic crosslinks, and polyvinyl alcohol, and loaded with curcumin designed for colon cancer drug delivery. The results demonstrated that the nanocomposite hydrogels are able to protect curcumin from acidic pHs and enhance drug concentration and residence time in the colon tissue. | Curcumin | Drug release studies in buffered solutions at different pH. | Healthy Sprague-Dawley rats | 2016 [ |
| Dual pH-/enzyme responsive | PhloralTM | Unique patented coating that include Eudragit® | 5-ASA | Drug release at different pH and in pH = 6.8 human fecal slurry | 2020 [ | |
| Dual pH-/enzyme responsive | OPTICORETM | Coating technology consisting on an inner layer of Duocoat® to accelerate the release and an outer layer of Phloral (pH and enzyme responsive coating) | 5ASA | Drug release at different pH and in pH = 6.8 human fecal slurry | 2020 [ | |
| pH-responsive & target of CD44 receptors (HA-CD44) | NPs: Hyaluronic Acid-Functionalized nanoparticles encapsulated in a hydrogel of alginate and chitosan (7:3). | Tripeptide lysine-proline-valine was loaded into polymeric nanoparticles obtained from functionalized hyaluronic acid. These nanoparticles are nontoxic and biocompatible with intestinal cells an oral administration of the formulation allow the alleviation of colitis symptoms combining both accelerating mucosal healing and reducing inflammation. | Tripeptide KPV (Lysine-proline-valine) | Cytotoxicity and cellular uptake: | Mice | 2017 [ |
| Magnetically-driven & pH-responsive microparticles | Magnetic mesoporous microparticles with azo-derivative molecular gate | Hydrocortisone magnetic mesoporous microparticles decorated with bulky azo-derivatives allows a colon specific delivery and high in vivo efficacy in a rat model | Hydrocortisone | In vitro and in vivo assays | Sprague Dawley rats | 2018 [ |