Cargando…

Investigation of Combined Cyclodextrin and Hydrogel Formulation for Ocular Delivery of Dexamethasone Acetate by Means of Experimental Designs

Dexamethasone acetate (DXMa) has proven its efficiency to treat corneal inflammation, without a great propensity to increase intraocular pressure. Unfortunately, its poor aqueous solubility, associated with a rapid precorneal elimination, results in a low drug bioavailability and a low penetration a...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mazet, Roseline, Choisnard, Luc, Levilly, Delphine, Wouessidjewe, Denis, Gèze, Annabelle
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6320851/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30513707
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics10040249
_version_ 1783385301987622912
author Mazet, Roseline
Choisnard, Luc
Levilly, Delphine
Wouessidjewe, Denis
Gèze, Annabelle
author_facet Mazet, Roseline
Choisnard, Luc
Levilly, Delphine
Wouessidjewe, Denis
Gèze, Annabelle
author_sort Mazet, Roseline
collection PubMed
description Dexamethasone acetate (DXMa) has proven its efficiency to treat corneal inflammation, without a great propensity to increase intraocular pressure. Unfortunately, its poor aqueous solubility, associated with a rapid precorneal elimination, results in a low drug bioavailability and a low penetration after topical ocular administration. The main objective of this study was to improve the apparent aqueous solubility of DXMa using cyclodextrins. First, hydroxypropyl-β-CD (HPβCD) and hydroxypropyl-γ-CD (HPγCD) were used to enhance DXMa concentration in aqueous solution. The β and γ HPCD derivatives allowed the increase of the DXMa amount in solution at 25 °C by a factor of 500 and 1500, respectively. Second, with the aim of improving the persistence of the complex solution after instillation in the eye, the formulations of DXMa-based CD solutions with marketed ophthalmic gels (CELLUVISC(®), GEL-LARMES(®), and VISMED(®)) were investigated and optimized by means of special cubic mixture designs, allowing the defining of mixed gels loaded with 0.7% (HPβCD) and 2% (HPγCD) DXMa with osmolality within acceptable physiological range. Finally, in vitro drug release assays from the mixed gels were performed and compared with reference eye drops. Similarly to MAXIDEX(®) and DEXAFREE(®), in the case of mixed gel containing HPβCD, more than 90% of the drug was released within 2 h, while in mixed gel containing HPγCD, the release of DXMa was partial, reaching ≈60% in 2 h. This difference will have to be further addressed with ex vivo and in vivo ocular delivery experiments.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6320851
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-63208512019-01-11 Investigation of Combined Cyclodextrin and Hydrogel Formulation for Ocular Delivery of Dexamethasone Acetate by Means of Experimental Designs Mazet, Roseline Choisnard, Luc Levilly, Delphine Wouessidjewe, Denis Gèze, Annabelle Pharmaceutics Article Dexamethasone acetate (DXMa) has proven its efficiency to treat corneal inflammation, without a great propensity to increase intraocular pressure. Unfortunately, its poor aqueous solubility, associated with a rapid precorneal elimination, results in a low drug bioavailability and a low penetration after topical ocular administration. The main objective of this study was to improve the apparent aqueous solubility of DXMa using cyclodextrins. First, hydroxypropyl-β-CD (HPβCD) and hydroxypropyl-γ-CD (HPγCD) were used to enhance DXMa concentration in aqueous solution. The β and γ HPCD derivatives allowed the increase of the DXMa amount in solution at 25 °C by a factor of 500 and 1500, respectively. Second, with the aim of improving the persistence of the complex solution after instillation in the eye, the formulations of DXMa-based CD solutions with marketed ophthalmic gels (CELLUVISC(®), GEL-LARMES(®), and VISMED(®)) were investigated and optimized by means of special cubic mixture designs, allowing the defining of mixed gels loaded with 0.7% (HPβCD) and 2% (HPγCD) DXMa with osmolality within acceptable physiological range. Finally, in vitro drug release assays from the mixed gels were performed and compared with reference eye drops. Similarly to MAXIDEX(®) and DEXAFREE(®), in the case of mixed gel containing HPβCD, more than 90% of the drug was released within 2 h, while in mixed gel containing HPγCD, the release of DXMa was partial, reaching ≈60% in 2 h. This difference will have to be further addressed with ex vivo and in vivo ocular delivery experiments. MDPI 2018-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC6320851/ /pubmed/30513707 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics10040249 Text en © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Mazet, Roseline
Choisnard, Luc
Levilly, Delphine
Wouessidjewe, Denis
Gèze, Annabelle
Investigation of Combined Cyclodextrin and Hydrogel Formulation for Ocular Delivery of Dexamethasone Acetate by Means of Experimental Designs
title Investigation of Combined Cyclodextrin and Hydrogel Formulation for Ocular Delivery of Dexamethasone Acetate by Means of Experimental Designs
title_full Investigation of Combined Cyclodextrin and Hydrogel Formulation for Ocular Delivery of Dexamethasone Acetate by Means of Experimental Designs
title_fullStr Investigation of Combined Cyclodextrin and Hydrogel Formulation for Ocular Delivery of Dexamethasone Acetate by Means of Experimental Designs
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of Combined Cyclodextrin and Hydrogel Formulation for Ocular Delivery of Dexamethasone Acetate by Means of Experimental Designs
title_short Investigation of Combined Cyclodextrin and Hydrogel Formulation for Ocular Delivery of Dexamethasone Acetate by Means of Experimental Designs
title_sort investigation of combined cyclodextrin and hydrogel formulation for ocular delivery of dexamethasone acetate by means of experimental designs
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6320851/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30513707
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics10040249
work_keys_str_mv AT mazetroseline investigationofcombinedcyclodextrinandhydrogelformulationforoculardeliveryofdexamethasoneacetatebymeansofexperimentaldesigns
AT choisnardluc investigationofcombinedcyclodextrinandhydrogelformulationforoculardeliveryofdexamethasoneacetatebymeansofexperimentaldesigns
AT levillydelphine investigationofcombinedcyclodextrinandhydrogelformulationforoculardeliveryofdexamethasoneacetatebymeansofexperimentaldesigns
AT wouessidjewedenis investigationofcombinedcyclodextrinandhydrogelformulationforoculardeliveryofdexamethasoneacetatebymeansofexperimentaldesigns
AT gezeannabelle investigationofcombinedcyclodextrinandhydrogelformulationforoculardeliveryofdexamethasoneacetatebymeansofexperimentaldesigns