Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2487137 | Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2009 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
A supercritical carbon dioxide micronization technique based on gasâassisted melting atomization has been designed to prepare proteinâloaded solid lipid submicron particles. The supercritical process was applied to homogeneous dispersions of insulin in lipid mixtures: (1) tristearin, Tweenâ80, phosphatidylcholine and 5 kDa PEG (1:0.1:0.9:1 and 1:0.1:0.9:2 weight ratio); and (2) tristearin, dioctyl sulfosuccinate and phosphatidylcholine (1:1:0.5 weight ratio). Optimized process conditions yielded dry nonagglomerated powders with high product recovery (70%, w/w). Dynamic light scattering and transmission electron microscopy showed that two size fractions of particles, with 80-120 and 200-400 nm diameters, were produced. In all final products, dimethylsulfoxide used to prepare the insulin/lipid mixture was below 20 ppm. Protein encapsulation efficiency increased up to 80% as the DMSO content in the insulin/lipid mixture increased. Compared to the particles without PEG, the polymerâcontaining particles dispersed rapidly in water, and the dispersions were more stable under centrifugation as less than 20% of suspended particles precipitated after extensive centrifugation. In vitro, the protein was slowly released from the formulation without PEG, while a burst and faster release were obtained from the formulations containing PEG. Subcutaneous injection to diabetic mice of insulin extracted from the particles showed that the supercritical process did not impair the protein hypoglycemic activity. © 2008 WileyâLiss, Inc. and the American Pharmacists Association J Pharm Sci 98:640-650, 2009
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Drug Discovery
Authors
Stefano Salmaso, Nicola Elvassore, Alberto Bertucco, Paolo Caliceti,