Wasan K M
Division of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Drug Dev Ind Pharm. 2001 Apr;27(4):267-76. doi: 10.1081/ddc-100103726.
The rapidly increasing availability of drug receptor structural characteristics has permitted the receptor-guided synthesis of potential new drug molecules. This synthesis strategy frequently results in the creation of polycyclic and highly hydrophobic compounds, with attendant poor oral bioavailability resulting from low solubility and slow dissolution rate in the primarily aqueous contents of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. In an attempt to improve the solubility-limited bioavailabiliy associated with these compounds, formulators have turned to the use of lipid excipients in which the compounds can be solubilized prior to oral administration. This new class of excipients presents the pharmaceutical scientist with a number of new challenges at all stages of the formulation development process, beginning with the excipient selection and stability assessment of the prototype formulation, up to and including scale-up and mass production of the final market-image product. The interaction of lipid-based formulations with the gastrointestinal system and associated digestive processes presents additional challenges and opportunities that will be understood more fully as we begin to unravel the intricacies of the GI processing of lipid excipients. For example, an increasing body of evidence has shown that certain lipids are capable of inhibiting both presystemic drug metabolism and drug efflux by the gut wall mediated by p-glycoprotein (PGP). And, it is well known that lipids are capable of enhancing lymphatic transport of hydrophobic drugs, thereby reducing drug clearance resulting from hepatic first-pass metabolism. This review addresses the current state of knowledge regarding oral lipid-based formulation development and scale-up issues and the physiological and biopharmaceutical aspects pertinent to the development of an orally bioavailable and efficacious dosage form.
药物受体结构特征信息的迅速增加,使得基于受体指导合成潜在的新药分子成为可能。这种合成策略常常会产生多环且高度疏水的化合物,由于其在胃肠道(GI)主要水性内容物中的低溶解度和缓慢溶解速率,导致口服生物利用度较差。为了改善与这些化合物相关的溶解度受限的生物利用度,制剂研发人员开始使用脂质辅料,使这些化合物在口服给药前能够溶解。这类新型辅料在制剂研发过程的各个阶段都给药物科学家带来了许多新挑战,从原型制剂的辅料选择和稳定性评估,一直到最终上市产品的放大生产和大规模生产。基于脂质的制剂与胃肠道系统及相关消化过程的相互作用带来了更多挑战和机遇,随着我们开始深入了解脂质辅料在胃肠道中的复杂过程,这些挑战和机遇将得到更充分的认识。例如,越来越多的证据表明,某些脂质能够抑制由P-糖蛋白(PGP)介导的肠道壁的首过药物代谢和药物外排。而且,众所周知,脂质能够增强疏水性药物的淋巴转运,从而减少肝脏首过代谢导致的药物清除。本综述阐述了口服脂质制剂研发和放大生产问题的当前知识状态,以及与开发口服生物利用度高且有效的剂型相关的生理和生物药剂学方面的内容。