PEGylated Lipid Polymeric Nanoparticle–Encapsulated Acyclovir for In Vitro Controlled Release and Ex Vivo Gut Sac Permeation

被引:0
作者
Syed Mahmood
Kong Chak Kiong
Chun Shern Tham
Tan Choo Chien
Ayah Rebhi Hilles
Jayarama Reddy Venugopal
机构
[1] University Malaysia Pahang,Department of Pharmaceutical Engineering, Faculty of Chemical and Process Engineering Technology
[2] University Malaysia Pahang,Centre of Excellence for Advanced Research in Fluid Flow (CARIFF)
[3] PICOMS International University College of Medical Sciences,Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Medical Science and Technology
[4] Universiti Malaysia Pahang,Faculty of Industrial Sciences & Technology
来源
AAPS PharmSciTech | / 21卷
关键词
acyclovir; hybrid nanoparticles (LPHNs); Box-Behnken design; permeation;
D O I
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摘要
Currently, pharmaceutical research is directed wide range for developing new drugs for oral administration to target disease. Acyclovir formulation is having common issues of short half-life and poor permeability, causing messy treatment which results in patient incompliance. The present study formulates a lipid polymeric hybrid nanoparticles for antiviral acyclovir (ACV) agent with Phospholipon® 90G (lecithin), chitosan, and polyethylene glycol (PEG) to improve controlled release of the drugs. The study focused on the encapsulation of the ACV in lipid polymeric particle and their sustained delivery. The formulation developed for the self-assembly of chitosan and lecithin to form a shell encapsulating acyclovir, followed by PEGylation. Optimisation was performed via Box-Behnken Design (BBD), forming nanoparticles with size of 187.7 ± 3.75 nm, 83.81 ± 1.93% drug-entrapped efficiency (EE), and + 37.7 ± 1.16 mV zeta potential. Scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy images displayed spherical nanoparticles formation. Encapsulation of ACV and complexity with other physical parameters are confirmed through analysis using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, differential scanning calorimetry, and X-ray diffraction. Nanoparticle produced was capable of achieving 24-h sustained release in vitro on gastric and intestinal environments. Ex vivo study proved the improvement of acyclovir’s apparent permeability from 2 × 10−6 to 6.46 × 10−6 cm s−1. Acyclovir new formulation was achieved to be stable up to 60 days for controlled release of the drugs.
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