Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Controlled release systems, such as polymeric microparticles (MPs), have emerged as a promising solution to extend the bioavailability and reduce dosing frequency for biologic drugs; however, the formulation of these systems to encapsulate highly sensitive, hydrophilic biologic drugs within hydrophobic polymers remains a nontrivial task. Although scalable manufacturing and FDA approval of single emulsion processes encapsulating small molecules has been achieved, scaling more complex double emulsion processes to encapsulate hydrophilic biologics remains more challenging. : Here, we demonstrate that two hydrophilic, low-molecular-weight, recombinant chemokines, CCL22 and CCL2, can be encapsulated in poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) MPs using a single emulsion method where the proteins are dissolved in an organic solvent during formulation. : As expected, we observed some differences in release kinetics from single emulsion MPs compared to double emulsion MPs, which traditionally have been used to encapsulate proteins. Single emulsion MPs exhibited a substantially reduced initial burst. Importantly, protein released from single emulsion CCL22-MPs also retained biological activity, as determined by a cell-based functional assay. Decreasing particle size or changing the polymer end group from PLGA-COOH to PLGA-OH increased the initial burst from single emulsion MPs, demonstrating tunability of release kinetics for protein-loaded, single emulsion MPs. Finally, to improve scalability and enable more precise control over MP formulations, the single emulsion process was adapted to a microfluidic, continuous manufacturing system, and the resulting MPs were evaluated similarly. : Altogether, this study demonstrates the feasibility of using a single emulsion encapsulation method for at least some protein biologics.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12389030PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics17081056DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

single emulsion
40
emulsion mps
20
emulsion
12
single
10
microfluidic continuous
8
continuous manufacturing
8
mps
8
biologic drugs
8
emulsion processes
8
double emulsion
8

Similar Publications

Background: This study evaluated the efficiency CE-latanoprost unidose (cationic emulsion of latanoprost) versus latanoprost unidose (non-emulsion formulation) in open-angle glaucoma and ocular hypertension (OAG/OHT) with concomitant ocular surface disease (OSD) patients' treatment in Spain.

Methods: A cost-utility analysis was performed using a Markov model simulating the progression of OAG/OHT. From a Spanish National Health System perspective over a 5-year time horizon, quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) and the total cost of each therapy were estimated (annual discount rate: 3%).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: In the framework of the Alt-SPF consortium, a large ring study was conducted to evaluate different alternative methods for SPF determination. This paper reports and discusses the results of a new in vitro approach, the Fused Method. The study aimed to determine whether the Fused Method would provide similar SPF results to those obtained using ISO 24444 and whether UVA-PF would be comparable to ISO 24443.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Advancing the design and construction of artificial protocells with organized complexity, diverse functionality and practical applicability is urgently demanded in vitro synthetic biology and bioengineering but remains a grand challenge. Here, we present a versatile Pickering emulsion-based encapsulation approach to transform membraneless coacervate compartments into robust multicompartmental hybrid microreactors, which concurrently assimilate the expected attributes of hierarchically compartmentalized structure, molecularly crowded environment, selectively permeable ability and mechanically reinforced stability. Single or multiple biological and non-biological catalytic species can be spatially sequestered in specific domains of the hybrid microreactor, enabling spatiotemporal regulation of individual biocatalysis or divergent cascades with high reaction efficiency.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Postoperative ocular inflammation is a frequent complication of eye surgeries commonly managed using corticosteroids or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAIDs) eye drops. However, poor ocular bioavailability and patient non-adherence due to frequent dosing limit the therapeutic efficacy of conventional eye drops. This study aimed to develop a sustained-release ocular insert containing bromfenac sodium (BS)-loaded poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) microparticles (MPs) with an initial 3% (/) free BS fraction incorporated into a poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) matrix designed to achieve a dual-phase release profile for improved postoperative therapy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Controlled release systems, such as polymeric microparticles (MPs), have emerged as a promising solution to extend the bioavailability and reduce dosing frequency for biologic drugs; however, the formulation of these systems to encapsulate highly sensitive, hydrophilic biologic drugs within hydrophobic polymers remains a nontrivial task. Although scalable manufacturing and FDA approval of single emulsion processes encapsulating small molecules has been achieved, scaling more complex double emulsion processes to encapsulate hydrophilic biologics remains more challenging. : Here, we demonstrate that two hydrophilic, low-molecular-weight, recombinant chemokines, CCL22 and CCL2, can be encapsulated in poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) MPs using a single emulsion method where the proteins are dissolved in an organic solvent during formulation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF