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4,723
result(s) for
"oral bioavailability"
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Preclinical Drug Pharmacokinetic, Tissue Distribution and Excretion Profiles of the Novel Limonin Derivate HY-071085 as an Anti-Inflammatory and Analgesic Candidate in Rats and Beagle Dogs
2022
Limonin is one of the research hotspots in natural drug development. However, its low solubility in water leads to poor oral bioavailability, discouraging the further study of its potential as a candidate compound. In order to overcome this limitation, and to enhance its biological activities, a novel limonin derivative—HY-071085—was synthesized by structural modification, and has exhibited strong anti-inflammatory and analgesic activity. In order to achieve a thorough understanding of the biological actions of HY-071085 in vivo, this study evaluated the pharmacokinetics and bioavailability of HY-071085 in rats and beagle dogs, and the distribution and excretion in rats. Using ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry, the kinetic profiles of HY-071085 in the plasma of healthy rats and beagle dogs after a single gavage, repeated gavages and the intravenous injection of HY-071085 were studied. The tissue distribution (heart, liver, spleen, lung, kidney, gastric tissue, intestine, brain, skin, testis, ovary and womb) and excretion of HY-071085 were also studied. These results showed that HY-071085 has nonlinear dynamic characteristics in rat and beagle dog plasma. It was found that the plasma concentrations of HY-071085 in female rats were significantly higher than those in male rats after a single oral administration. There were gender differences in the kinetic behavior of HY-071085 in rats; however, there was no difference identified in dogs. HY-071085 was mainly eliminated as metabolites in rats, and was distributed in most of the tissues except the brain, with the highest content being in the gastric tissue and intestinal arease, followed by the liver, spleen, fat, lung, kidney, ovary and heart. The bioavailability of HY-071085 in male and female rats was 2.8% and 10.8%, respectively, and was about 13.1% in beagle dogs. The plasma protein binding rate of HY-071085 in rats, beagle dogs and humans ranged from 32.9% to 100%, with obvious species differences. In conclusion, our study provides useful information regarding the absorption, distribution and excretion of HY-071085, which will provide a good base for the study of the mechanism of its biological effects.
Journal Article
Development of Abiraterone Acetate Nanocrystal Tablets to Enhance Oral Bioavailability: Formulation Optimization, Characterization, In Vitro Dissolution and Pharmacokinetic Evaluation
by
Qiyue Wang
,
Pengcheng Xu
,
Yuqi Li
in
abiraterone acetate
,
abiraterone acetate; nanocrystal; poloxamer; dissolution; oral bioavailability
,
Androgens
2022
Abiraterone acetate is a prodrug of abiraterone used in combination with prednisone as a standard therapeutic strategy for hormone-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). Due to the poor solubility and permeability, the release and absorption of abiraterone acetate are low and reduce its bioavailability. In this project, abiraterone acetate tablets prepared using nanocrystal technology were developed to overcome the drawbacks of normal tablets by enhancing in vitro dissolution rate and oral bioavailability. The abiraterone acetate nanocrystal suspensions were prepared by top-down wet milling method using a planetary ball mill with the mixture of Poloxamer 407 and Poloxamer 188 as the optimized stabilizer at a ratio of 7:1. The optimized nanocrystals were freeze-dried and characterized using DLS, TEM, DSC, and XRD. The abiraterone acetate nanocrystal tablets significantly improve the in vitro dissolution rate of abiraterone acetate compared to raw materials. Although exhibiting a similar dissolution rate compared to the Zytiga® tablets, the nanocrystal tablets significantly improve the oral bioavailability with Cmax and AUC0–t being 3.51-fold and 2.80-fold higher, respectively, in the pharmacokinetic study. The present data indicate that nanocrystal is a promising strategy for improving the dissolution and bioavailability of abiraterone acetate.
Journal Article
Oral delivery of protein and peptide drugs: from non-specific formulation approaches to intestinal cell targeting strategies
by
Chen, Guanyu
,
Gao, Yanfeng
,
Chen, Shaomeng
in
Administration, Oral
,
Bioavailability
,
Drug Delivery Systems
2022
The past few years has witnessed a booming market of protein and peptide drugs, owing to their superior efficiency and biocompatibility. Parenteral route is the most commonly employed method for protein and peptide drugs administration. However, short plasma half-life protein and peptide drugs requires repetitive injections and results in poor patient compliance. Oral delivery is a promising alternative but hindered by harsh gastrointestinal environment and defensive intestinal epithelial barriers. Therefore, designing suitable oral delivery systems for peptide and protein drugs has been a persistent challenge. This review summarizes the main challenges for oral protein and peptide drugs delivery and highlights the advanced formulation strategies to improve their oral bioavailability. More importantly, major intestinal cell types and available targeting receptors are introduced along with the potential strategies to target these cell types. We also described the multifunctional biomaterials which can be used to prepare oral carrier systems as well as to modulate the mucosal immune response. Understanding the emerging delivery strategies and challenges for protein and peptide drugs will surely inspire the production of promising oral delivery systems that serves therapeutic needs in clinical settings.
Journal Article
Food-Derived Bioactive Peptides in Human Health: Challenges and Opportunities
by
Majumder, Kaustav
,
Chakrabarti, Subhadeep
,
Guha, Snigdha
in
absorption
,
Amino Acid Sequence
,
amino acid sequences
2018
Recent scientific evidence suggests that food proteins not only serve as nutrients, but can also modulate the body’s physiological functions. These physiological functions are primarily regulated by some peptides that are encrypted in the native protein sequences. These bioactive peptides can exert health beneficial properties and thus are considered as a lead compound for the development of nutraceuticals or functional foods. In the past few decades, a wide range of food-derived bioactive peptide sequences have been identified, with multiple health beneficial activities. However, the commercial application of these bioactive peptides has been delayed because of the absence of appropriate and scalable production methods, proper exploration of the mechanisms of action, high gastro-intestinal digestibility, variable absorption rate, and the lack of well-designed clinical trials to provide the substantial evidence for potential health claims. This review article discusses the current techniques, challenges of the current bioactive peptide production techniques, the oral use and gastrointestinal bioavailability of these food-derived bioactive peptides, and the overall regulatory environment.
Journal Article
Mechanisms of increased bioavailability through amorphous solid dispersions: a review
by
Puchkov, Maxim
,
Schittny, Andreas
,
Huwyler, Jörg
in
Amorphous solid dispersion
,
Bioavailability
,
Biological Availability
2020
Amorphous solid dispersions (ASDs) can increase the oral bioavailability of poorly soluble drugs. However, their use in drug development is comparably rare due to a lack of basic understanding of mechanisms governing drug liberation and absorption in vivo. Furthermore, the lack of a unified nomenclature hampers the interpretation and classification of research data. In this review, we therefore summarize and conceptualize mechanisms covering the dissolution of ASDs, formation of supersaturated ASD solutions, factors responsible for solution stabilization, drug uptake from ASD solutions, and drug distribution within these complex systems as well as effects of excipients. Furthermore, we discuss the importance of these findings on the development of ASDs. This improved overall understanding of these mechanisms will facilitate a rational ASD formulation development and will serve as a basis for further mechanistic research on drug delivery by ASDs.
Journal Article
The Influence of Nanoparticle Properties on Oral Bioavailability of Drugs
2020
Oral administration has been the most common therapeutic regimen in various diseases because of its high safety, convenience, lower costs, and high compliance of patients. However, susceptible in hostile gastrointestinal (GI) environment, many drugs show poor permeability across GI tract mucus and intestinal epithelium with poor oral absorption and limited therapeutic efficacy. In recent years, nanoparticulate drug delivery systems (NDDS) have become a hot research spot because of their unique advantages including protecting drug from premature degrading and interacting with the physiological environment, increasing intracellular penetration, and enhancing drug absorption. However, a slight change in physicochemistry of nanoparticles can significantly impact their interaction with biological pathways and alter the oral bioavailability of drugs. Hence, this review focuses on the factors affecting oral bioavailability from two aspects. On the one hand, the factors are the biochemical and physiological barriers in oral drugs delivery. On the other hand, the factors are the nanoparticle properties including size, surface properties, and shape of nanoparticles.
Journal Article
Formulation of Nanomicelles to Improve the Solubility and the Oral Absorption of Silymarin
by
D’Ambrosio, Mario
,
Bilia, Anna Rita
,
Landucci, Elisa
in
antioxidant activity
,
Bioavailability
,
Body fluids
2019
Two novel nanomicellar formulations were developed to improve the poor aqueous solubility and the oral absorption of silymarin. Polymeric nanomicelles made of Soluplus and mixed nanomicelles combining Soluplus with d-α-tocopherol polyethylene glycol 1000 succinate (vitamin E TPGS) were prepared using the thin film method. Physicochemical parameters were investigated, in particular the average diameter, the homogeneity (expressed as polydispersity index), the zeta potential, the morphology, the encapsulation efficiency, the drug loading, the critical micellar concentration and the cloud point. The sizes of ~60 nm, the narrow size distribution (polydispersity index ≤0.1) and the encapsulation efficiency >92% indicated the high affinity between silymarin and the core of the nanomicelles. Solubility studies demonstrated that the solubility of silymarin increased by ~6-fold when loaded into nanomicelles. Furthermore, the physical and chemical parameters of SLM-loaded formulations stored at room temperature and in refrigerated conditions (4 °C) were monitored over three months. In vitro stability and release studies in media miming the physiological conditions were also performed. In addition, both formulations did not alter the antioxidant properties of silymarin as evidenced by the 1,1-Diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl radical (DPPH) assay. The potential of the nanomicelles to increase the intestinal absorption of silymarin was firstly investigated by the parallel artificial membrane permeability assay. Subsequently, transport studies employing Caco-2 cell line demonstrated that mixed nanomicelles statistically enhanced the permeability of silymarin compared to polymeric nanomicelles and unformulated extract. Finally, the uptake studies indicated that both nanomicellar formulations entered into Caco-2 cells via energy-dependent mechanisms.
Journal Article
Enhancement of oral bioavailability of quercetin by metabolic inhibitory nanosuspensions compared to conventional nanosuspensions
by
Ao, Hui
,
Fu, Jingxin
,
Li, Haowen
in
Bioavailability
,
Drug delivery systems
,
metabolic inhibition
2021
Quercetin-loaded nanosuspensions (Que-NSps) added metabolic inhibitors were evaluated as drug delivery system to promote the oral bioavailability of quercetin. Que-NSps were prepared respectively using d-alpha tocopherol acid polyethylene glycol succinate (TPGS) or Soybean Lecithin (SPC) as stabilizer. On the basis, Piperine (Pip) or sodium oleate (SO) was, respectively, encapsulated in Que-NSps as phase II metabolic inhibitors. The resulting Que-NSps all displayed a mean particle size of about 200 nm and drug loading content was in the range of 22.3-27.8%. The release of quercetin from Que-NSps was slow and sustained. After oral administration of 50 mg/kg different Que-NSps, the levels of free quercetin in plasma were significantly promoted, the concentration of quercetin metabolites (isorhamnetin and quercetin 3-O-β-d-Glucuronide) were decreased. The absolute bioavailability was, respectively 15.55%, 6.93%, 12.38%, and 23.58% for TPGS-Que-NSps, TPGS-SO-Que-NSps, SPC-Que-NSps, and SPC-Pip-Que-NSps, and 3.61% for quercetin water suspension. SPC-Pip-Que-NSps turned out to an ideal nanocarrier combined nano drug delivery system together with metabolic inhibitor to promote oral absorption of quercetin.
Journal Article
A Novel Chemometric Method for the Prediction of Human Oral Bioavailability
by
Xu, Xue
,
Li, Yan
,
Huang, Chao
in
Accuracy
,
Administration, Oral
,
ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B - chemistry
2012
Orally administered drugs must overcome several barriers before reaching their target site. Such barriers depend largely upon specific membrane transport systems and intracellular drug-metabolizing enzymes. For the first time, the P-glycoprotein (P-gp) and cytochrome P450s, the main line of defense by limiting the oral bioavailability (OB) of drugs, were brought into construction of QSAR modeling for human OB based on 805 structurally diverse drug and drug-like molecules. The linear (multiple linear regression: MLR, and partial least squares regression: PLS) and nonlinear (support-vector machine regression: SVR) methods are used to construct the models with their predictivity verified with five-fold cross-validation and independent external tests. The performance of SVR is slightly better than that of MLR and PLS, as indicated by its determination coefficient (R2) of 0.80 and standard error of estimate (SEE) of 0.31 for test sets. For the MLR and PLS, they are relatively weak, showing prediction abilities of 0.60 and 0.64 for the training set with SEE of 0.40 and 0.31, respectively. Our study indicates that the MLR, PLS and SVR-based in silico models have good potential in facilitating the prediction of oral bioavailability and can be applied in future drug design.
Journal Article