Cargando…

Development of Statistically Optimized Chemically Cross-Linked Hydrogel for the Sustained-Release Delivery of Favipiravir

Nowadays, the use of statistical approaches, i.e., Box–Bhenken designs, are becoming very effective for developing and optimizing pharmaceutical drug formulations. In the current work, a Box–Bhenken design was employed using Design Expert version 11 to develop, evaluate, and optimize a hydrogel-base...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Salawi, Ahmad, Khan, Arooj, Zaman, Muhammad, Riaz, Tehseen, Ihsan, Hafsa, Butt, Muhammad Hammad, Aman, Waqar, Khan, Rahima, Majeed, Imtiaz, Almoshari, Yosif, Alshamrani, Meshal
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9227890/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35745945
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14122369
_version_ 1784734296041324544
author Salawi, Ahmad
Khan, Arooj
Zaman, Muhammad
Riaz, Tehseen
Ihsan, Hafsa
Butt, Muhammad Hammad
Aman, Waqar
Khan, Rahima
Majeed, Imtiaz
Almoshari, Yosif
Alshamrani, Meshal
author_facet Salawi, Ahmad
Khan, Arooj
Zaman, Muhammad
Riaz, Tehseen
Ihsan, Hafsa
Butt, Muhammad Hammad
Aman, Waqar
Khan, Rahima
Majeed, Imtiaz
Almoshari, Yosif
Alshamrani, Meshal
author_sort Salawi, Ahmad
collection PubMed
description Nowadays, the use of statistical approaches, i.e., Box–Bhenken designs, are becoming very effective for developing and optimizing pharmaceutical drug formulations. In the current work, a Box–Bhenken design was employed using Design Expert version 11 to develop, evaluate, and optimize a hydrogel-based formulation for sustained release of an antiviral drug, i.e., favipiravir. The hydrogels were prepared using the free radical polymerization technique. β-Cyclodextrin (β-CD), N,N′-methylenebisacrylamide (MBA), acrylic acid (AA), and potassium per sulfate (KPS) were used as oligomer, crosslinker, monomer, and initiator, respectively. Three variables, including β-CD (X(1)), MBA (X(2)), and AA (X(3)) were used at various concentrations for the preparation of hydrogels, followed by evaluation of a sol–gel fraction, swelling, porosity, chemical compatibilities, in vitro drug release, and entrapment efficiency. The results of the studies revealed that the degree of swelling was pH dependent, the best swelling being at pH 7.2 (1976%). On the other hand, for the low sol fraction of 0.2%, the reasonable porosity made the hydrogel capable of loading 99% favipiravir, despite its hydrophobic nature. The maximum entrapment efficiency (99%) was observed in optimized hydrogel formulation (F15). Similarly, in vitro drug release studies showed that the prepared hydrogels exhibited a good, sustained release effect till the 24th hour. The kinetic modelling of drug release data revealed that the Korsmeyer–Peppas model was best fit model, describing a diffusion type of drug release from the prepared hydrogels. Conclusively, the outcomes predict that the hydrogel-based system could be a good choice for developing a sustained-release, once-daily dosage form of favipiravir for improved patient compliance.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9227890
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-92278902022-06-25 Development of Statistically Optimized Chemically Cross-Linked Hydrogel for the Sustained-Release Delivery of Favipiravir Salawi, Ahmad Khan, Arooj Zaman, Muhammad Riaz, Tehseen Ihsan, Hafsa Butt, Muhammad Hammad Aman, Waqar Khan, Rahima Majeed, Imtiaz Almoshari, Yosif Alshamrani, Meshal Polymers (Basel) Article Nowadays, the use of statistical approaches, i.e., Box–Bhenken designs, are becoming very effective for developing and optimizing pharmaceutical drug formulations. In the current work, a Box–Bhenken design was employed using Design Expert version 11 to develop, evaluate, and optimize a hydrogel-based formulation for sustained release of an antiviral drug, i.e., favipiravir. The hydrogels were prepared using the free radical polymerization technique. β-Cyclodextrin (β-CD), N,N′-methylenebisacrylamide (MBA), acrylic acid (AA), and potassium per sulfate (KPS) were used as oligomer, crosslinker, monomer, and initiator, respectively. Three variables, including β-CD (X(1)), MBA (X(2)), and AA (X(3)) were used at various concentrations for the preparation of hydrogels, followed by evaluation of a sol–gel fraction, swelling, porosity, chemical compatibilities, in vitro drug release, and entrapment efficiency. The results of the studies revealed that the degree of swelling was pH dependent, the best swelling being at pH 7.2 (1976%). On the other hand, for the low sol fraction of 0.2%, the reasonable porosity made the hydrogel capable of loading 99% favipiravir, despite its hydrophobic nature. The maximum entrapment efficiency (99%) was observed in optimized hydrogel formulation (F15). Similarly, in vitro drug release studies showed that the prepared hydrogels exhibited a good, sustained release effect till the 24th hour. The kinetic modelling of drug release data revealed that the Korsmeyer–Peppas model was best fit model, describing a diffusion type of drug release from the prepared hydrogels. Conclusively, the outcomes predict that the hydrogel-based system could be a good choice for developing a sustained-release, once-daily dosage form of favipiravir for improved patient compliance. MDPI 2022-06-11 /pmc/articles/PMC9227890/ /pubmed/35745945 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14122369 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Salawi, Ahmad
Khan, Arooj
Zaman, Muhammad
Riaz, Tehseen
Ihsan, Hafsa
Butt, Muhammad Hammad
Aman, Waqar
Khan, Rahima
Majeed, Imtiaz
Almoshari, Yosif
Alshamrani, Meshal
Development of Statistically Optimized Chemically Cross-Linked Hydrogel for the Sustained-Release Delivery of Favipiravir
title Development of Statistically Optimized Chemically Cross-Linked Hydrogel for the Sustained-Release Delivery of Favipiravir
title_full Development of Statistically Optimized Chemically Cross-Linked Hydrogel for the Sustained-Release Delivery of Favipiravir
title_fullStr Development of Statistically Optimized Chemically Cross-Linked Hydrogel for the Sustained-Release Delivery of Favipiravir
title_full_unstemmed Development of Statistically Optimized Chemically Cross-Linked Hydrogel for the Sustained-Release Delivery of Favipiravir
title_short Development of Statistically Optimized Chemically Cross-Linked Hydrogel for the Sustained-Release Delivery of Favipiravir
title_sort development of statistically optimized chemically cross-linked hydrogel for the sustained-release delivery of favipiravir
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9227890/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35745945
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14122369
work_keys_str_mv AT salawiahmad developmentofstatisticallyoptimizedchemicallycrosslinkedhydrogelforthesustainedreleasedeliveryoffavipiravir
AT khanarooj developmentofstatisticallyoptimizedchemicallycrosslinkedhydrogelforthesustainedreleasedeliveryoffavipiravir
AT zamanmuhammad developmentofstatisticallyoptimizedchemicallycrosslinkedhydrogelforthesustainedreleasedeliveryoffavipiravir
AT riaztehseen developmentofstatisticallyoptimizedchemicallycrosslinkedhydrogelforthesustainedreleasedeliveryoffavipiravir
AT ihsanhafsa developmentofstatisticallyoptimizedchemicallycrosslinkedhydrogelforthesustainedreleasedeliveryoffavipiravir
AT buttmuhammadhammad developmentofstatisticallyoptimizedchemicallycrosslinkedhydrogelforthesustainedreleasedeliveryoffavipiravir
AT amanwaqar developmentofstatisticallyoptimizedchemicallycrosslinkedhydrogelforthesustainedreleasedeliveryoffavipiravir
AT khanrahima developmentofstatisticallyoptimizedchemicallycrosslinkedhydrogelforthesustainedreleasedeliveryoffavipiravir
AT majeedimtiaz developmentofstatisticallyoptimizedchemicallycrosslinkedhydrogelforthesustainedreleasedeliveryoffavipiravir
AT almoshariyosif developmentofstatisticallyoptimizedchemicallycrosslinkedhydrogelforthesustainedreleasedeliveryoffavipiravir
AT alshamranimeshal developmentofstatisticallyoptimizedchemicallycrosslinkedhydrogelforthesustainedreleasedeliveryoffavipiravir