Can Amphotericin B and Itraconazole be co-delivered orally? Tailoring Oral Fixed-Dose Combination Coated Granules for Systemic Mycoses

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Fernández García, Raquel and Walsh, David and O'Connell, Peter and Slowing Barillas, Karla Verónica and Raposo González, Rafaela and Ballesteros Papantonakis, Paloma and JImenez-Cebrian, Aurora and Chamorro Sancho, Manuel J. and Bolás Fernández, Francisco and Healy, Anne Marie and Serrano López, Dolores Remedios (2023) Can Amphotericin B and Itraconazole be co-delivered orally? Tailoring Oral Fixed-Dose Combination Coated Granules for Systemic Mycoses. European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics, 183 . pp. 74-91. ISSN 0939-6411

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejpb.2023.01.003



Abstract

The incidence and prevalence of invasive fungal infections have increased significantly over the last few years, leading to a global health problem due to the lack of effective treatments. Amphotericin B (AmB) and itraconazole (ITR) are two antifungal drugs with different mechanisms of action. In this work, AmB and ITR have been formulated within granules to elicit an enhanced pharmacological effect, while enhancing the oral bioavailability of AmB. A Quality by Design (QbD) approach was utilised to prepare fixed-dose combination (FDC) granules consisting of a core containing AmB with functional excipients, such as inulin, microcrystalline cellulose (MCC), chitosan, sodium deoxycholate (NaDC) and Soluplus® and polyvinyl pyrrolidone (PVP), coated with a polymeric layer containing ITR with Soluplus® or a combination of Poloxamer 188 and hydroxypropyl methyl cellulose-acetyl succinate (HPMCAS). A Taguchi designs of experiments (DoE) with 7 factors and 2 levels was carried out to understand the key factors impacting on the physicochemical properties of the formulation followed by a Box-Behnken design with 3 factors in 3 levels chosen to optimise the formulation parameters. The core of the FDC granules was obtained by wet granulation and later coated using a fluidized bed. In vitro antifungal efficacy was demonstrated by measuring the inhibition halo against different species of Candida spp., including C. albicans (24.19-30.48 mm), C. parapsilosis (26.38-27.84 mm) and C. krusei (11.48-17.92 mm. AmB release was prolonged from 3 to 24 hours when the AmB granules were coated. In vivo in CD-1 male mice studies showed that these granules were more selective towards liver, spleen and lung compared to kidney (up to 5-fold more selective in liver, with an accumulation of 8.07 µg AmB/g liver after twice-daily 5 days administration of F2), resulting in an excellent oral administration option in the treatment of invasive mycosis. Nevertheless, some biochemical alterations were found, including a decrease in blood urea nitrogen (~17 g/dl) and alanine aminotransferase (<30 U/l) and an increase in the levels of bilirubin (~0.2 mg/dl) and alkaline phosphatase (<80 U/l), which could be indicative of a liver failure. Once-daily regimen for 10 days can be a promising therapy.


Item Type:Article
Uncontrolled Keywords:Oral delivery, Amphotericin B, Fixed-dose combination, Granules, Spray-coating, Itraconazole, Quality by design, Antifungal therapy, Azoles, Candida spp
Subjects:Medical sciences > Pharmacy > Food technology
ID Code:76230
Deposited On:08 Feb 2023 10:13
Last Modified:10 Feb 2023 10:37

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