Cyclodextrin-based nanocarriers containing a synergic drug combination: a potential formulation for pulmonary administration of antitubercular drugs

July 28, 2017

Title

Cyclodextrin-based nanocarriers containing a synergic drug combination: a potential formulation for pulmonary administration of antitubercular drugs

Author

Giuseppina Salzano, Jitendra Wankar, Stefano Ottani, Baptiste Villemagne, Alain R. Baulard, Nicolas Willand, Priscille Brodin, Ilse Manet, Ruxandra Gref

Year

2017

Journal

International Journal of Pharmaceutics

Abstract

Tuberculosis (TB) remains a major global health problem. The use of ethionamide (ETH), a main second line drug, is associated to severe toxic side-effects due to its low therapeutic index. In this challenging context, “booster” molecules have been synthetized to increase the efficacy of ETH. However, the administration of ETH/booster pair is mostly hampered by the low solubility of these drugs and the tendency of ETH to crystallize. Here, ETH and a poorly water-soluble booster, so-called BDM43266, were simultaneously loaded in polymeric β-cyclodextrin nanoparticles (pβCyD NPs) following a “green” protocol. The interaction of ETH and BDM43266 with pβCyD NPs was investigated by complementary techniques. Remarkably, the inclusion of ETH and BDM43266 pβCyD NPs led to an increase of their apparent solubility in water of 10- and 90-fold, respectively. Competition studies of ETH and BDM43266 for the CyD cavities of pβCyD NPs corroborated the fact that the drugs did not compete with each other, confirming the possibility to simultaneously co-incorporate them in NPs. The drug-loaded NP suspensions could be filtered through 0.22 micron filters. Finally, the drug-loaded NPs were passed through a Microsprayer® to evaluate the feasibility to administer pβCyD NPs by pulmonary route. Each spray delivered a constant amount of both drugs and the NPs were totally recovered after passage through the Microsprayer®. These promising results pave the way for a future use of pβCyD NPs for the pulmonary delivery of the ETH/BDM43266 pair.

Instrument

J-715

Keywords

Circular dichroism, Induced CD, Polymers, Nanostructures, Pharmaceutical, Materials