| Literature DB >> 35336004 |
Tyler P Crowe1, Walter H Hsu2.
Abstract
Neurological diseases continue to increase in prevalence worldwide. Combined with the lack of modifiable risk factors or strongly efficacious therapies, these disorders pose a significant and growing burden on healthcare systems and societies. The development of neuroprotective or curative therapies is limited by a variety of factors, but none more than the highly selective blood-brain barrier. Intranasal administration can bypass this barrier completely and allow direct access to brain tissues, enabling a large number of potential new therapies ranging from bioactive peptides to stem cells. Current research indicates that merely administering simple solutions is inefficient and may limit therapeutic success. While many therapies can be delivered to some degree without carrier molecules or significant modification, a growing body of research has indicated several methods of improving the safety and efficacy of this administration route, such as nasal permeability enhancers, gelling agents, or nanocarrier formulations. This review shall discuss promising delivery systems and their role in expanding the clinical efficacy of this novel administration route. Optimization of intranasal administration will be crucial as novel therapies continue to be studied in clinical trials and approved to meet the growing demand for the treatment of patients with neurological diseases.Entities:
Keywords: CNS; drug delivery; intranasal; nanocarriers; nose-to-brain
Year: 2022 PMID: 35336004 PMCID: PMC8950509 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics14030629
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1Anatomy and histology of the nasal cavity, epithelium, and transport pathway to the CNS. (A) Drugs administered to the nasal cavity cross the epithelium in either the superior olfactory region (OR) and move along the olfactory nerve (left arrow) to the olfactory bulb (OB), or the lateral respiratory regions (RR) and the trigeminal nerve (right arrow) to the pons. (B) From the lamina propria (LP), drugs are transported to the CNS along the olfactory sensory neuron (OSN, left arrow) p through the cribriform place (CP). A similar process occurs along the trigeminal nerve. Drugs can also be lost to systemic absorption via lymphatics (LV) or vasculature (BV). The anterior vestibular region (VR) is minimally involved in the intranasal route to the brain.
Figure 2Comparison of olfactory (left) and respiratory epithelia (right), including location of the neurons within the sustentacular cell layers. The olfactory sensory neuron’s exposure to the nasal cavity helps explain the olfactory nerve’s larger role in intranasal delivery. Reprinted with permission from ref [15]. 2018 Stella Gänger.
Figure 3Schematic of intracellular and extracellular pathways for intranasal drug delivery.
Description of factors affecting intranasal delivery.
| Factor | Summary | References |
|---|---|---|
| Mucus | Negatively charged gel reduces movement of large, charged, and nonpolar molecules | [ |
| Enzymatic degradation | Antimicrobial and other enzymes in mucus and epithelial cells degrade the drug | [ |
| Ciliary clearance | Ciliary turnover of mucus will remove slowly diffusing drugs | [ |
| Tight junctions | Apical proteins greatly restrict drug movement across epithelium between cells | [ |
| Intrinsic drug characteristics | Molecule weight over 1 kDa, polarity, strong charge can affect absorption | [ |
| Formulation factors | pH, buffer capacity, osmolarity, and volume are important for liquids. Solubility is additionally important for powders | [ |
| Vasculature and Lymphatics drainage | Vasculature of lamina propria can drain away drug before transport into the CNS | [ |
Notable additives and strategies for intranasal delivery systems.
| Additive or Formulation | Summary | Examples | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Simple solutions | Simplest strategy which has shown to be possible but likely insufficient | PBS or Saline solutions | [ |
| Nasal Permeability enhancers | Broad category of agents which disrupt nasal epithelia to increase absorption | Cyclodextrans, Sodium Hyaluronate, Cremophor RH40, Chitosan, Cyclopentyladenosine | [ |
| Enzyme Modulators | Disrupt the normal function of enzymes in the epithelium | P-glycoprotein inhibitors, CYP450 inhibitors, Acetazolamide | [ |
| Vasoconstrictors | Reducing the rich vascular supply causes less drug to be absorbed into circulation | Phenylephrine | [ |
| Mucoadhesives | Increase adherence to mucus and residence time in cavity for better absorption | Chitosan, Carbopol®, Carboxymethylcellulose | [ |
| Ciliostatics | Impaired ciliary movement decreases mucus clearance increasing residence time | Chlorbutol, Hydroxybenzoate, Phenylmercuric acid, Thiomersal | [ |
| Biogels | Liquid that activates to gel in nasal cavity, increasing residence time and absorption | Pluronic/Carbopol gels, Cellulose derivatives/Paenol gels, Chitosan derivative gels | [ |
| Devices | Devices target delivery of broader formulations to the olfactory region of the nasal cavity | ViaNase™, OptiNose™, Precision Olfactory Device®, Mechanical Spray bottles | [ |
| US or Magnet guiding | Niche application of US or magnetic gradients to guide labeled drug delivery | Ultrasound and Magnetophoresis | [ |
| Nanocarriers | Broad category of organic and inorganic nanoparticles that enhance absorption and delivery of bioactive drugs to brain | Chitosan, PGLA nanoparticles, Liposomes, Microemulsions, Solid-Lipid nanoparticles | [ |
Figure 4Estimation of deposition by nasal spray devices based on human in vivo studies. (A) regions of nasal cavity including the anterior vestibular (VR), superior olfactory (OR) and large respiratory regions (RR), as well as the posterior oropharynx (NP). The olfactory nerve is in the olfactory region and goes to the olfactory bulb (OB), while the trigeminal nerve is found in the respiratory regions and goes to the pons. (B) distribution of traditional nasal sprays is limited to vestibular and lower respiratory regions. (C–E) distributions of Vianase™ (C), Optinose Opt-Powder™ (D), and Impel POD® (E) all demonstrate significantly more dose reaching the olfactory region.