| Literature DB >> 33512801 |
Christoph Steiger1,2, Nhi V Phan1, Haoying Sun1, Hen-Wei Huang1,2, Kaitlyn Hess1, Aaron Lopes1, Joshua Korzenik2, Robert Langer1, Giovanni Traverso1,2,3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Bile acids, such as chenodeoxycholic acid, play an important role in digestion but are also involved in intestinal motility, fluid homeostasis, and humoral activity. Colonic delivery of sodium chenodeoxycholate (CDC) has demonstrated clinical efficacy in treating irritable bowel syndrome with constipation but was associated with a high frequency of abdominal pain. We hypothesized that these adverse effects were triggered by local super-physiological CDC levels caused by an unfavorable pharmacokinetic profile of the delayed release formulation.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33512801 PMCID: PMC7710212 DOI: 10.14309/ctg.0000000000000229
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Gastroenterol ISSN: 2155-384X Impact factor: 4.396
Figure 1.BA delivery system. The delivery system comprises 2 layers. (a) After disintegration of the Eudragit S100 coating, the system first releases a small dose immediately. This dose establishes a prosecretory and prokinetic BA level around the delivery system, facilitating further release from the controlled release layer. (b) The comparison of a (i) dissected pill and a (ii) dissected pill which was exposed to water for 5 minutes is shown to demonstrate the biphasic kinetic profile of this delivery approach. BA, bile acid.
Figure 2.Pharmacokinetic evaluation of the bilayer delivery system vs traditional formulations. In vitro release pattern of (a) 1 g CDC capsules (used in a clinical front-runner study (9) linked to a high frequency of abdominal pain), (d) bilayered delivery systems, and (g) single-layered delivery systems (serving as control for a conventional extended release delivery system exposed to SGF [1 hour], SIF [0.2M, SIF, pH 6.8, 1 hour], and SIF [0.2M, pH 7.4], respectively [100 rpm]). An in silico pharmacokinetic model was used to understand the CDC levels over time in the colon for (b) 1 g CDC capsule, (e) the bilayered delivery system (×2), and the (h) single-layered delivery system (×2). For comparison, (k) colonic CDC levels that have previously been linked to secretory (1) (14), prokinetic (2) (18), and distinct prokinetic (3) (19) effects are shown in comparison to phycological bile acid levels (4) (6). The pharmacokinetic model was also used to predict systemic bile acid levels in swine (dashed line), which are shown in comparison to systemic levels (solid lines, LC-MS) for (c) 1 g CDC capsules, (f) bilayered delivery systems (×2), and (i) a single-layered delivery system (×2, n = 4). The results are depicted as the mean of n = 3 ± SD unless otherwise noted (*P ≤ 0.05). CDC, sodium chenodeoxycholate; SGF, simulated gastric fluid; SIF, simulated intestinal fluid.
Figure 3.In vivo evaluation of CDC bilayer delivery systems as compared to the capsule formulation (used in a clinical frontrunner study and linked to a high frequency of abdominal pain (9)). (a) Kaplan-Meier plot demonstrating the bilayer delivery system's capacity to maintain integrity throughout intestinal passage in swine. The results are shown in comparison to small intestinal transit time in man (1) (21). (b) Shows retrieved dissected delivery systems after 4 hours. (c) Representative rectal manometry patterns after rectal placement of uncoated bilayer delivery systems or CDC capsules. Amplitudes of 3 rectal manometry patterns are shown in (d). Giant contractions are indicated by arrowheads (data normalized to the mean amplitude). CDC, sodium chenodeoxycholate.
Characteristics of CDC formulations
| Formulation | Capsule | Single layer | Bilayer |
| Unmodified release CDC (g) | 1 | 0 | 0.1 |
| Extended release (g) | 0 | 0.5 | 0.4 |
| Applied | 1 | 2 | 2 |
CDC, sodium chenodeoxycholate.