| Literature DB >> 35057030 |
Marina Löscher1, Chiara Seiz1, José Hurst1, Sven Schnichels1.
Abstract
Topical drug delivery to the posterior segment of the eye is a very complex challenge. However, topical delivery is highly desired, to achieve an easy-to-use treatment option for retinal diseases. In this review, we focus on the drug characteristics that are relevant to succeed in this challenge. An overview on the ocular barriers that need to be overcome and some relevant animal models to study ocular pharmacokinetics are given. Furthermore, a summary of substances that were able to reach the posterior segment after eye drop application is provided, as well as an outline of investigated delivery systems to improve ocular drug delivery. Some promising results of substances delivered to the retina suggest that topical treatment of retinal diseases might be possible in the future, which warrants further research.Entities:
Keywords: drug characteristics; ocular barriers; ocular drug delivery; ocular pharmacokinetics; permeability; retinal diseases
Year: 2022 PMID: 35057030 PMCID: PMC8779621 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics14010134
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1Schematic overview of drug absorption and elimination after topical application.
Influence of drug characteristics on transport of topically applied drugs across ocular tissues.
| Ocular Tissues | Size and Radius of the Drug | Charge of the Drug | Drug Characteristics | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lipophilic | Hydrophilic | |||
| Cornea | <500 Da | Easier penetration of positively-charged molecules | Transcellular, 5–10× greater absorption than hydrophilic drugs, | Paracellular |
| Conjunctiva | 5–10 kDa | Easier than for hydrophilic compounds | Mainly through conjunctiva (9–17 times larger surface area than cornea) | |
| Sclera | <70 kDa, better permeability of globular proteins vs. linear dextrans | Passage of negatively-charged solutes is facilitated | RPE-choroid and sclera are equal barriers | Easier penetration than lipophilic compounds, RPE is rate-limiting |
| Vitreous | <500 nm | Negatively-charged particles diffuse better than cationic particles | Easier than for hydrophilic compounds | Longer half-life |
Ocular characteristics of commonly used preclinical models vs. the human eye (modified and supplemented according to Wang et al. [45]).
| Parameter | Mice | Rabbit | Pig | Human |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blink intervals | 300 [ | 360 [ | 10 [ | 5 [ |
| Central corneal thickness [µm] | 123–134 [ | 349–384 [ | 543–797 [ | 548 ± 35 [ |
| Anterior chamber depth/ocular axis [mm] | 0.1 [ | 0.16 [ | 1.77 ± 0.27 [ | 3.05 [ |
| Anterior chamber volume [µL] | 2.39–3.08 [ | ~250 [ | ~260 [ | ~170 [ |
| Aqueous humor production [µL/min] | 0.18 ± 0.05 [ | 1.46 ± 1.71 [ | 3–4 * [ | 2.4 ± 0.6 [ |
| Vitreous volume [µL] | 4.4 ± 0.7 [ | ~1400 [ | 3300 [ | ~4400 [ |
| Mean Retinal thickness [µm] | 204 [ | Vascular area 163–340, avascular area 142–168 [ | 300 [ | 310 [ |
| Average RGC density [cells/mm2] | 4000 [ | 6000 [ | 5700 [ |
* aqueous flow rate.
Overview of topically applied drugs reaching the posterior segment in preclinical investigations.
| Compound | Characteristics | Size | Physiological Charge | logP * | Preclinical Investigations | Cmax Retina | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Drugs tested for glaucoma treatment | |||||||
| Dorzolamide (hydrochloride) | inhibitor of carbonic anhydrase | 324.4 Da (360.9 Da) | 1 | Dorzolamide: −0.15 | Japanese white rabbits: 1 drop of 1% dorzolamide hydrochloride eyedrops -> Cmax after 1 h | 3.79 µg/g | [ |
| Brimonidine | Alpha2-adrenergic agonist | 292.13 Da | 1 | 1.37 | Monkeys: 14 days 0.5% brimonidine twice daily (35 µL drop -> 8.4 µCi, 119µg Brim) -> Cmax of radioactivity in choroid/retina | Monkeys: 30.600 µg-Eq/g | [ |
| Betaxolol | Selektiver ß-Blocker | 307.4 Da | 1 | 2.81 | Humans: 0.25% betaxolol twice daily for 28 days or longer -> 1290 ± 1170 ng/g in the choroid | Humans: 71.4 ± 41.8 ng/g | [ |
| Netardusil | ROCK-inhibitor | 453 Da | 1 | 4.73 | Rabbits: single drop (35 µL of 14C-netarsudil 0.02% -> Cmax of in Retina-choroid | 80 (left) or 50 (right) ng ∗ eq/g | [ |
| Memantine (HCL) | Antagonist to nmDA-Receptors | 179.2 Da (215.76 Da) | 1 | Memantine: 3.5 (hmdb.ca) | Arterially perfused bovine eye model: 4 mL of 9.27 mM memantine hydrochloride solution placed in reservoir on the eye (8.002 µg) -> Cmax retina 2046 ng/g vitreous 442 ng/g, Choroid/RPE 3894 ng/g after 9 h of perfusion | 2046 ng/g | [ |
| Drugs tested for AMD treatment | |||||||
| Bevacizumab | recombinant humanized monoclonal antibody, inhibits VEGF-A | 149 kDa | Negatively-charged at pH 7.4 [ | Unknown (known to be lipophilic) | Pigmented rabbits: Bevacizumab eye drops (1.25 mg/0.05 mL six times daily for the first 7 days) -> 18.2 ± 4.2 ng/g in retina/choroid | 18.2 ± 4.2 ng/g in retina/choroid | [ |
| ESBA105 | anti-TNF-alpha single-chain antibody fragment | 26 kDa | - | - | Rabbits: 10 mg/mL ESBA105, 50 µL eyedrop -> 1 day hourly drops up to 10 h (up to 5 mg/day) -> Cmax: vitreous humor (295 ng/mL), neuroretina (214 ng/mL) and RPE-choroid (263 ng/mL) | Single drop: 214 ng/mL | [ |
| Innovative small molecules | |||||||
|
| Β-Amyloid aggregation modulator, dipeptide | 289 Da | Computed logP-1.1 | Monkeys: single eye drop -> >100 nM in the retina, via sclera and choroid | >100 nM | [ | |
|
| integrin αVβ3 antagonist | 475.5 Da | Computed logP 2.7 | Rabbits: Single eye drop of 50 µL 5% SF-0166 (2.5 mg/eye) -> Cmax retina-choroid 5103 ng/g | 5103 ng/g in retina-choroid | [ | |
|
| Inhibitor of VEGF, PDGF, and bFGF through intracellular mechanism | 718.04 Da | 2 | Squalamine: 3.24 | Laser-induced CNV rat model -> systemically administered squalamine lactate -> partially reduced choroidal neovascular membrane development | [ | |
| Inhibitors of receptor tyrosine kinases | |||||||
|
| inhibits Src kinases and selected receptor tyrosine kinases | 580.1 Da (476) | 1 | 7.64 | Laser-induced CNV mouse model-> single 10 µL drop of 1% TG100801: Cmax (TG100801) -> 242 nM (retina), 1680 nM (Sclera/choroid); Cmax (TG100572) -> 97 nM (retina), 2460 nM (Sclera/Choroid); | Mouse: TG100572 -> 97 nM | [ |
|
| targets multiple receptor tyrosine kinases such as VEGF receptors | 437.5 Da | 0 | 3.55 | Laser-induced CNV rat model -> twice daily topical eye drop treatment -> decreased leakage from photocoagulated lesions by 89.5% ( | [ | |
|
| small-molecule VEGFR-2 inhibitor | 445.40 Da | 1 | 2.93 | PK: brown Norway rats tid for 10 days (4 µL x 0.3% suspension) and 1 drop on day 11 -> Cmax 1910 nM (retina) | 1910 nM | [ |
|
| VEGFR2 tyrosine kinase inhibitor | 532.4 Da | 0 | Computed logP 3.7 | Topical administration led to significant and sustained drug levels in retina and choroid, as well as suppression of neovascularization in various models | [ | |
* predicted physiological charge and logP obtained from https://go.drugbank.com (accessed on 21 December 2021); computed logP obtained from https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov (accessed on 21 December 2021); in red: tested in clinical trials.
Overview on drug delivery systems for topical delivery to the posterior segment.
| Delivery System (Drug) | Size | Characteristics | Pharmacokinetics | Further Results | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amino acid/Peptid-based drug delivery | |||||
| Valine-hemisuccinate ester prodrug: Val-HS (THC) | THC-Val-HS 513.6 Da; THC 314.2 Da | Higher aqueous solubility, higher polar surface area, improved logD (pH 7.4) | Rabbits: 2x daily for 5 days 50 µL THC-Val-HS in Tocrisolve emulsion (300 µg THC) -> THC-Val-HS: 15.5 ng/50 mg retina-choroid, THC: 5.2 ng/50 mg retina-choroid after 1 h | IOP-lowering equivalent to pilocarpine in a rabbit glaucoma model | [ |
| Cell-penetrating peptide (CPP) HIV transactivator of transcription (TAT) (acidic fibroblast growth factor (aFGF)) | Tat-aFGF-His: ~17.3-kDa | TAT is positively charged (11 amino acids: GRKKRRQRRRC) [ | Rats: 40 µL drop (2 µg TAT-aFGF-His) -> His+ cells peaked after 30 min, still detectable after 8 h in the retina (mainly retinal ganglion cells) | Strong protection against ischemia-reperfusion injury in rats | [ |
| CPP TAT (calpain inhibitory peptide) | Tat-µCl: 2857.37 Da (23 amino acids) | TAT is positively charged (11 amino acids: GRKKRRQRRRC) [ | Rats: 7 days twice daily (20 µL of 1 mM Tat-µCl) -> Cmax 15.3 pg/µg protein in the retina 1 h after last drop | Tat-µCl was diffusely distributed throughout the retina | [ |
| CPP polyarginine-6 (bevacizumab) | (5[6]-carboxyfluorescein-RRRRRR-COOH) | Rat: single 20 µL eye drop of bevacizumab (25 µg/µL) -> Cmax 1.65 ± 0.26 in the retina after 40 min; | Mouse model of CNV: CPP and bevacizumab eye drops (twice daily 5 µL for 10 days) significantly reduced CNV lesions, comparable to anti-VEGF injection | [ | |
| Lipid-based drug delivery | |||||
| Annexin V liposomes (bevacizumab) | Mean diameter of 163 nm | On interaction with PS containing membranes, annexin V is reported to form higher order structures that induce formation of actin-independent endocytic vesicles [ | Rats: Single 30 µL drop (13 mg/mL Avastin) -> 127 ng/g in the posterior eye; | [ | |
| Annexin V liposomes (TGF-ß1) | Mean particle size 157 nm | Surface charge of liposomes became more negative with annexin V | Rabbits: 30 µL twice in 5 min (125 ng/mL TGF-ß1) -> Cmax 114.7 pg/mL in the vitreous | [ | |
| Solid lipid nanoparticles SLN (Indomethacin); | Particle size: IN-SLN 226 ± 5 nm | Colloidal nanoparticulate dispersions -> biocompatible and mucoadhesive | Rabbits: Two x 50 µL eye drops -> retinal-choroidal IN-concentrations of 227 ng/g with IN-SLN und 893 ng/g with IN-NLC | Improved transcorneal permeability and retention characteristics of IN | [ |
| DNA-based drug delivery | |||||
| Lipid DNA-Nanoparticles | NP alone: 10 nm | Amphiphil, lipophilic core, and hydrophilic corona; | Higher IOP reduction than Briminodine alone in DBA/2J mice | [ | |
| Lipid DNA-Nanoparticles | NP alone: 10 nm | Amphiphil, lipophilic core, and hydrophilic corona; | Albino rats: single drop of Trav-NP or Trav (80 µM) -> travoprost after 1 h: 434.9 pg/mg (Trav-NP) compared to 230.3 pg/mg (Trav) | [ | |
| Carbohydrate-based drug delivery | |||||
| Sodium carprate and hydroxypropyl methylcellulose solution (28 kDa antibody fragment -> | 28 kDa | Solution with penetration enhancer 0.5% sodium caprate and viscosity enhancer 1.5% hydroxypropyl methylcellulose | Rabbits: 50 µL eye drops at 20 min intervals over 12 h -> 50–150 ng/mL in the vitreous | [ | |
| γ-cyclodextrin (CD) (dexamethasone) | 100–300 nm drug/CD complexes | Shaped like truncated cones, with a hydrophilic outer surface and a somewhat lipophilic central cavity | Rabbits: 1.5% dex- | [ | |
| Chitosan oligosaccharide (CSO) nanomicelles (dexamethasone) | 100 nm | CSO + Valylvaline (VV) + stearic acid (SA); VV is targeting PepT-1 -> faster crossing of conjunctival and scleral barriers | Rabbits: 3 × 50µL CSO-VV-SA -> at 0.5 and 1 h Dex conc. reached therapeutic levels (>200 ng/g) in sclera-choroid-retina | Higher ocular retention time compared with traditional eye drops | [ |
Figure 2Schematic presentation of drug delivery (DD) systems and formulation approaches to improve topical delivery to the back of the eye. (A) Drug delivery systems presented in this review. (B) Drugs that were transported by those delivery systems. (C) Diseases that are addressed with the DD system and drug. The molecular structures were obtained from https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov (accessed on 21 December 2021). Abbreviations: THC—tetrahydrocannabinol; aFGF—acidic fibroblast growth factor; µCL—calpain inhibitory peptide; Bev—bevacizumab; IR—retinal ischemia/reperfusion; PR deg—photoreceptor degeneration; AMD—age-related macular degeneration; IN—indomethacin; DR—diabetic retinopathy; TGF-β1—transforming growth factor beta 1; Brim—brimonidine; Trav—travoprost; scFv—single-chain variable-domain fragment; Dex—dexamethasone. Created with BioRender.com (accessed on 21 December 2021).