Development and Characterization of Oral Efavirenz-Loaded Nanostructured Lipid Carriers and Their Optimization with Box-Behnken Design Approach for the Neurological Disorder.
Ali Sartaj, Bushra Nabi, Ashif Iqubal, Nidhi Aggarwal, Kashif Haider, Sanjula Baboota, Javed Ali
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
To enhance brain delivery of efavirenz (EFV), optimized nanostructured lipid carriers (NLCs) were developed using a melt-emulsification technique and probe sonication. Box-Behnken design was chosen to systematically analyze the effects of variables on formulation outcomes, enabling efficient optimization with fewer experimental trials. This selection helped to improve the formulation by allowing us to refine key characteristics such as particle size, entrapment efficiency, and polydispersity index (PDI). The optimized EFV-NLCs had a mean particle size of 91.41 ± 7.90 nm, a PDI of 0.28 ± 0.04, a zeta potential of -17 mV, an entrapment efficiency of 85 ± 7%, and a drug loading of 14 ± 1%. Transmission electron microscopy confirmed that the EFV-NLCs were spherical with uniform size distribution. In vitro release tests showed prolonged drug release, with release rates ranging from 63.09 ± 2.76% to 84.43 ± 4.24% at pH 1.2 and 87.66 ± 6.31% to 92.56 ± 1.48% at pH 6.8. This was significantly better than the EFV suspension, which showed moderate and unsustainable release rates over 8 h. Furthermore, dissolution studies in both fasted and fed state simulated-intestinal-fluids (FaSSIF and FeSSIF) over 6 h revealed that % cumulative drug release was significantly higher in FeSSIF (94.06 ± 1.62%) compared with FaSSIF (65.21 ± 3.95%), indicating enhanced absorption in the presence of food. In vitro gut permeation studies revealed that EFV-NLCs had a 2.05-fold higher drug permeability than the suspension. These findings suggest that EFV-NLCs are promising for targeted brain delivery, are safe for oral administration, and could be instrumental in managing neuro-acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.
期刊介绍:
ASSAY and Drug Development Technologies provides access to novel techniques and robust tools that enable critical advances in early-stage screening. This research published in the Journal leads to important therapeutics and platforms for drug discovery and development. This reputable peer-reviewed journal features original papers application-oriented technology reviews, topical issues on novel and burgeoning areas of research, and reports in methodology and technology application.
ASSAY and Drug Development Technologies coverage includes:
-Assay design, target development, and high-throughput technologies-
Hit to Lead optimization and medicinal chemistry through preclinical candidate selection-
Lab automation, sample management, bioinformatics, data mining, virtual screening, and data analysis-
Approaches to assays configured for gene families, inherited, and infectious diseases-
Assays and strategies for adapting model organisms to drug discovery-
The use of stem cells as models of disease-
Translation of phenotypic outputs to target identification-
Exploration and mechanistic studies of the technical basis for assay and screening artifacts