| Literature DB >> 35801404 |
Mohammed H Elkomy1,2, Shahira F El Menshawe2, Rasha M Kharshoum2, Amany M Abdeltwab2, Raghda R S Hussein3,4, Doaa S Hamad5, Izzeddin Alsalahat6, Heba M Aboud2.
Abstract
Asthma represents a globally serious non-communicable ailment with significant public health outcomes for both pediatrics and adults triggering vast morbidity and fatality in critical cases. The β2-adrenoceptor agonist, terbutaline sulfate (TBN), is harnessed as a bronchodilator for monitoring asthma noising symptoms. Nevertheless, the hepatic first-pass metabolism correlated with TBN oral administration mitigates its clinical performance. Likewise, the regimens of inhaled TBN dosage forms restrict its exploitation. Consequently, this work is concerned with the assimilation of TBN into a novel non-phospholipid nanovesicular paradigm termed novasomes (NVS) for direct and effective TBN pulmonary targeting. TBN-NVS were tailored based on the thin film hydration method and Box-Behnken design was applied to statistically optimize the formulation variables. Also, the aerodynamic pattern of the optimal TBN-NVS was explored via cascade impaction. Moreover, comparative pharmacokinetic studies were conducted using a rat model. TBN elicited encapsulation efficiency as high as 70%. The optimized TBN-NVS formulation disclosed an average nano-size of 223.89 nm, ζ potential of -31.17 mV and a sustained drug release up to 24 h. Additionally, it manifested snowballed in vitro lung deposition behavior in cascade impactor with a fine particle fraction of 86.44%. In vivo histopathological studies verified safety of intratracheally-administered TBN-NVS. The pharmacokinetic studies divulged 3.88-fold accentuation in TBN bioavailability from the optimum TBN-NVS versus the oral TBN solution. Concisely, the results proposed that NVS are an auspicious nanovector for TBN pulmonary delivery with integral curbing of the disease owing to target specificity.Entities:
Keywords: Box-Behnken design; Bronchial asthma; novasomes; pharmacokinetics; pulmonary targeting; terbutaline sulfate
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35801404 PMCID: PMC9272939 DOI: 10.1080/10717544.2022.2092236
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Deliv ISSN: 1071-7544 Impact factor: 6.819
Box-Behnken design for optimization of the TBN-NVS.
| Factor (independent variables) | Level | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| −1 | 0 | +1 | |
| 20 | 40 | 60 | |
| 50 | 100 | 150 | |
| 15 | 25 | 50 | |
| Responses (dependent variables) | Constraints | ||
| Maximize | |||
| Minimize | |||
| Maximize | |||
TBN: terbutaline sulfate; NVS: novasomes.
Composition of TBN-NVS Formulations based on the Box-Behnken design and the observed response variables.
| Independent variables | Dependent variables | ||||||
| Formulation | PDI | ||||||
| F1a | 40 | 100 | 25 | 68.93 ± 6.04 | 233.19 ± 19.46 | 68.18 ± 1.95 | .41 |
| F2 | 20 | 150 | 25 | 67.28 ± 2.83 | 311.26 ± 13.63 | 62.35 ± 2.79 | .59 |
| F3 | 40 | 50 | 15 | 60.31 ± 2.46 | 205.94 ± 6.82 | 78.70 ± 1.34 | .51 |
| F4 | 20 | 50 | 25 | 45.72 ± 3.23 | 300.83 ± 14.02 | 74.14 ± 0.91 | .31 |
| F5a | 40 | 100 | 25 | 68.11 ± 7.21 | 235.10 ± 21.06 | 69.05 ± 2.08 | .39 |
| F6 | 40 | 150 | 50 | 69.15 ± 4.41 | 400.21 ± 32.86 | 60.47 ± 2.17 | .37 |
| F7 | 60 | 50 | 25 | 34.87 ± 3.23 | 314.18 ± 12.04 | 63.56 ± 1.19 | .32 |
| F8 | 20 | 100 | 15 | 63.07 ± 4.65 | 225.74 ± 17.64 | 76.93 ± 3.37 | .59 |
| F9a | 40 | 100 | 25 | 67.92 ± 8.56 | 234.37 ± 25.05 | 67.07 ± 2.21 | .38 |
| F10 | 40 | 50 | 50 | 65.18 ± 4.66 | 354.83 ± 48.81 | 65.64 ± 1.44 | .51 |
| F11 | 60 | 100 | 50 | 61.07 ± 4.53 | 440.24 ± 34.73 | 60.87 ± 1.95 | .39 |
| F12 | 40 | 150 | 15 | 65.94 ± 5.66 | 329.25 ± 28.78 | 70.59 ± 2.53 | .49 |
| F13 | 60 | 100 | 15 | 38.27 ± 2.01 | 391.11 ± 13.81 | 68.69 ± 3.69 | .52 |
| F14 | 20 | 100 | 50 | 68.35 ± 7.97 | 421.21 ± 28.18 | 70.65 ± 4.29 | .49 |
| F15 | 60 | 150 | 25 | 40.29 ± 5.28 | 466.36 ± 29.59 | 55.18 ± 2.61 | .56 |
TBN: terbutaline sulfate; NVS: novasomes; EE%: entrapment efficiency percent; PS: particle size; Q8h: accumulative % release after 8 h; PDI: polydispersity index.
Drug concentration is constant (10 mg).
Data are mean values (n = 3) ± SD.
Indicates the center point of the design.
Figure 1.Model diagnostic plots of the three independent variables (a) linear correlation plots between actual and predicted values for various responses of TBN-NVS, (b) normal quantile-quantile plots of residual errors and (c) plot of residual error vs. model predicted responses.
Figure 2.(a) Response 3D plots and (b) cube plot for the effect of cholesterol (X), Span 60 (X) and stearic acid (X) concentrations on the entrapment efficiency percent (Y).
Figure 3.(a) Response 3D plots and (b) cube plot for the effect of cholesterol (X), Span 60 (X) and stearic acid (X) concentrations on the particle size (Y).
Figure 4.(a) Response 3D plots and (b) cube plot for the effect of cholesterol (X), Span 60 (X) and stearic acid (X) concentrations on the accumulative % drug release after 8 h (Y).
Results of regression analysis for responses Y (EE%), Y (PS) and Y (Q8h%).
| Response | Model | Adequate precision | R2 | Adjusted R2 | Predicted R2 | SD | CV% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quadratic | 10.39 | .9627 | .8955 | .8859 | 4.06 | 6.87 | .0046 | |
| Quadratic | 23.58 | .9905 | .9733 | .8494 | 14.08 | 4.35 | .0002 | |
| Quadratic | 16.58 | .9656 | .9316 | .9193 | 1.67 | 2.48 | .0016 |
EE%: entrapment efficiency percent; PS: particle size; Q8h: accumulative % release after 8 h; R2: coefficient of determination; SD: standard deviation; CV: coefficient of variation.
TBN-NVS optimal formulation composition with the laboratory measured and model predicted characteristics.
| Factor | Optimal value | Response | Measured value | Predicted value | % Prediction errora |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 30.77 | 67.48 ± 5.23 | 71.00 | −5.21 | ||
| 90.72 | 223.89 ± 22.41 | 209.23 | 6.55 | ||
| 15.00 | 80.11 ± 7.25 | 78.33 | 2.22 |
TBN: terbutaline sulfate; NVS: novasomes.
% Prediction error = (Measured − Predicted/Measured*100).
Figure 5.Transmission electron micrograph of the optimized TBN-NVS formulation.
Figure 6.Effect of storage on the EE%, particle size and ζ potential of the optimized TBN-NVS formulation.
Cascade impaction results of TBN-NVS.
| Aerodynamic parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| TED (µg) | 144.64 ± 12.81 |
| TED as percentage of nominal dose (%) | 72.32 ± 5.54 |
| FPD (µg) | 125.03 ± 6.71 |
| FPF (%) | 86.44 ± 6.32 |
| MMAD (µg) | 3.30 ± .06 |
TBN: terbutaline sulfate; NVS: novasomes; TED: total emitted dose; FPD: fine particle dose; FPF: fine particle fraction; MMAD: mass median aerodynamic diameter.
Results are means ± SD (n = 6).
Figure 7.Light photomicrographs showing histopathological sections of (a) control untreated rat lung and (b) rat lung received an intratracheal suspension of TBN-NVS formulation (200X H & E).
Figure 8.TBN plasma concentration time profiles after administration of oral TBN solution, i.t TBN solution and i.t TBN-NVS suspension.
The mean pharmacokinetic parameters of TBN in rat plasma following administration of oral TBN solution, i.t TBN solution and i.t TBN-NVS suspension.
| Pharmacokinetic parameter | Formulation | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Oral | i.t | i.t | |
| Cmax (ng/ml) | 77.41 ± 5.33 | 104.27 ± 10.99a | 65.22 ± 4.21a ,b |
| Tmax (h) | 1.00 ± .25 | .50 ± .00a | 4.00 ± .00a ,b |
| Ke (h−1) | .21 ± .03 | .13 ± .03a | .10 ± .004b |
| t1/2 (h) | 3.30 ± .62 | 5.33 ± .37a | 6.93 ± .10a ,b |
| AUC0–24 (ng h/ml) | 167.99 ± 7.20 | 218.93 ± 15.87a | 588.84 ± 24.86a ,b |
| AUC0–∞ (ng h/ml) | 168.47 ± 11.11 | 223.41 ± 16.17a | 655.24 ± 27.95a ,b |
| Frel (%) | – | 132.61 | 388.93b |
TBN: terbutaline sulfate; NVS: novasomes.
Data presented are mean ± SD, n = 4.
Using one-way ANOVA followed by Tukey’s post-hoc test.
p < .05 vs. oral TBN solution.
p < .05 vs. i.t TBN solution.