Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5550954 International Journal of Pharmaceutics 2016 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

UV-curable gels, used as nail cosmetics for their in vivo durability, were reported to be promising as topical nail medicines. Our first aim was thus to investigate whether such durability applies to drug-loaded formulations. This was found to be true. However, ethanol inclusion in the pharmaceutical formulation (to enable drug loading) reduced the in vivo residence. The second aim was therefore to determine any other effects of ethanol, and if ethanol could be avoided by the choice of monomers. Thus, three methacrylate monomers, ethyl methacrylate, isobornyl methacrylate and 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate (HEMA) were selected, and their influence on the formulation properties were determined. Ethanol and the methacrylate monomer influenced some (but not all) of the formulation properties. The most significant was that HEMA could dissolve drug and enable the preparation of ethanol-free, drug-loaded formulations, which would benefit in vivo residence. The absence of ethanol reduced drug loading, release and ungual flux, but had no negative impact on the in vitro anti-fungal efficacy. Thus, judicious selection of gel components enabled the exclusion of ethanol. The long in vivo residence, little residual monomers, sufficient ungual permeation and in vitro anti-fungal activity of the gels indicates their potential as anti-onychomycotic topical medicines.

Graphical abstractDownload high-res image (188KB)Download full-size imageLong in vivo residence of UV-cured films (compared to nail lacquer control), and their in vitro anti-fungal efficacy, shown by the lack of fungal growth, compared to fungal growth in drug-free films

Related Topics
Health Sciences Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Science Pharmaceutical Science
Authors
, , , , , , ,