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Recent advances in improving oral drug bioavailability by cocrystals

[Image: see text] Introduction: Oral drug delivery is the most favored route of drug administration. However, poor oral bioavailability is one of the leading reasons for insufficient clinical efficacy. Improving oral absorption of drugs with low water solubility and/or low intestinal membrane permea...

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Autores principales: Emami, Shahram, Siahi-Shadbad, Mohammadreza, Adibkia, Khosro, Barzegar-Jalali, Mohammad
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Tabriz University of Medical Sciences 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6209825/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30397585
http://dx.doi.org/10.15171/bi.2018.33
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author Emami, Shahram
Siahi-Shadbad, Mohammadreza
Adibkia, Khosro
Barzegar-Jalali, Mohammad
author_facet Emami, Shahram
Siahi-Shadbad, Mohammadreza
Adibkia, Khosro
Barzegar-Jalali, Mohammad
author_sort Emami, Shahram
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Introduction: Oral drug delivery is the most favored route of drug administration. However, poor oral bioavailability is one of the leading reasons for insufficient clinical efficacy. Improving oral absorption of drugs with low water solubility and/or low intestinal membrane permeability is an active field of research. Cocrystallization of drugs with appropriate coformers is a promising approach for enhancing oral bioavailability. Methods: In the present review, we have focused on recent advances that have been made in improving oral absorption through cocrystallization. The covered areas include supersaturation and its importance on oral absorption of cocrystals, permeability of cocrystals through membranes, drug-coformer pharmacokinetic (PK) interactions, conducting in vivo-in vitro correlations for cocrystals. Additionally, a discussion has been made on the integration of nanocrystal technology with supramolecular design. Marketed cocrystal products and PK studies in human subjects are also reported. Results: Considering supersaturation and consequent precipitation properties is necessary when evaluating dissolution and bioavailability of cocrystals. Appropriate excipients should be included to control precipitation kinetics and to capture solubility advantage of cocrystals. Beside to solubility, cocrystals may modify membrane permeability of drugs. Therefore, cocrystals can find applications in improving oral bioavailability of poorly permeable drugs. It has been shown that cocrystals may interrupt cellular integrity of cellular monolayers which can raise toxicity concerns. Some of coformers may interact with intestinal absorption of drugs through changing intestinal blood flow, metabolism and inhibiting efflux pumps. Therefore, caution should be taken into account when conducting bioavailability studies. Nanosized cocrystals have shown a high potential towards improving absorption of poorly soluble drugs. Conclusions: Cocrystals have found their way from the proof-of-principle stage to the clinic. Up to now, at least two cocrystal products have gained approval from regulatory bodies. However, there are remaining challenges on safety, predicting in vivo behavior and revealing real potential of cocrystals in the human.
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spelling pubmed-62098252018-11-05 Recent advances in improving oral drug bioavailability by cocrystals Emami, Shahram Siahi-Shadbad, Mohammadreza Adibkia, Khosro Barzegar-Jalali, Mohammad Bioimpacts Review [Image: see text] Introduction: Oral drug delivery is the most favored route of drug administration. However, poor oral bioavailability is one of the leading reasons for insufficient clinical efficacy. Improving oral absorption of drugs with low water solubility and/or low intestinal membrane permeability is an active field of research. Cocrystallization of drugs with appropriate coformers is a promising approach for enhancing oral bioavailability. Methods: In the present review, we have focused on recent advances that have been made in improving oral absorption through cocrystallization. The covered areas include supersaturation and its importance on oral absorption of cocrystals, permeability of cocrystals through membranes, drug-coformer pharmacokinetic (PK) interactions, conducting in vivo-in vitro correlations for cocrystals. Additionally, a discussion has been made on the integration of nanocrystal technology with supramolecular design. Marketed cocrystal products and PK studies in human subjects are also reported. Results: Considering supersaturation and consequent precipitation properties is necessary when evaluating dissolution and bioavailability of cocrystals. Appropriate excipients should be included to control precipitation kinetics and to capture solubility advantage of cocrystals. Beside to solubility, cocrystals may modify membrane permeability of drugs. Therefore, cocrystals can find applications in improving oral bioavailability of poorly permeable drugs. It has been shown that cocrystals may interrupt cellular integrity of cellular monolayers which can raise toxicity concerns. Some of coformers may interact with intestinal absorption of drugs through changing intestinal blood flow, metabolism and inhibiting efflux pumps. Therefore, caution should be taken into account when conducting bioavailability studies. Nanosized cocrystals have shown a high potential towards improving absorption of poorly soluble drugs. Conclusions: Cocrystals have found their way from the proof-of-principle stage to the clinic. Up to now, at least two cocrystal products have gained approval from regulatory bodies. However, there are remaining challenges on safety, predicting in vivo behavior and revealing real potential of cocrystals in the human. Tabriz University of Medical Sciences 2018 2018-05-31 /pmc/articles/PMC6209825/ /pubmed/30397585 http://dx.doi.org/10.15171/bi.2018.33 Text en © 2018 The Author(s) This work is published by BioImpacts as an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/). Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review
Emami, Shahram
Siahi-Shadbad, Mohammadreza
Adibkia, Khosro
Barzegar-Jalali, Mohammad
Recent advances in improving oral drug bioavailability by cocrystals
title Recent advances in improving oral drug bioavailability by cocrystals
title_full Recent advances in improving oral drug bioavailability by cocrystals
title_fullStr Recent advances in improving oral drug bioavailability by cocrystals
title_full_unstemmed Recent advances in improving oral drug bioavailability by cocrystals
title_short Recent advances in improving oral drug bioavailability by cocrystals
title_sort recent advances in improving oral drug bioavailability by cocrystals
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6209825/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30397585
http://dx.doi.org/10.15171/bi.2018.33
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