Development and characteriza

Tacrolimus is a potent immunosuppressant; however, it suffers from several problems such as poor water solubility (4–12 μg/mL), low and variable oral bioavailability in patients, and narrow therapeutic window that could not be solved by the currently available i.v. formulation (Prograf®). Moreover,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Raisuddin Ali, Abubakar Farah, Ziyad Binkhathlan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-02-01
Series:Saudi Pharmaceutical Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1319016416300676
id doaj-71b0bbd6d38e489fbe0ef94cc6dda191
record_format Article
spelling doaj-71b0bbd6d38e489fbe0ef94cc6dda1912020-11-24T23:59:47ZengElsevierSaudi Pharmaceutical Journal1319-01642017-02-0125225826510.1016/j.jsps.2016.06.009Development and characterizaRaisuddin AliAbubakar FarahZiyad BinkhathlanTacrolimus is a potent immunosuppressant; however, it suffers from several problems such as poor water solubility (4–12 μg/mL), low and variable oral bioavailability in patients, and narrow therapeutic window that could not be solved by the currently available i.v. formulation (Prograf®). Moreover, Prograf® contains HCO-60 (PEGylated castor oil) as a surfactant, which is reported to cause several side effects including hypersensitivity reactions. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to investigate the potential of PEO-b-PCL polymeric micelles as alternative vehicles for the solubilization and delivery of tacrolimus. Four PEO-b-PCL block copolymers, with different molecular weights of PCL, were synthesized by ring opening polymerization of ε-caprolactone using methoxy polyethylene oxide (5,000 g mol−1) as initiator and stannous octoate as catalyst. Synthesized copolymers were characterized for their average molecular weights and polydispersity index by 1H NMR and gel permeation chromatography (GPC), respectively. Drug-free micelles of PEO-b-PCL were prepared through a co-solvent evaporation method using acetone as the organic co-solvent. Tacrolimus-loaded micelles were prepared using the same method with different initial amounts of drug. Prepared micelles were characterized for their mean diameter size and polydispersity of the micellar population by dynamic light scattering, and an HPLC assay was used to determine the encapsulation efficiency of tacrolimus. The average molecular weights of the synthesized copolymers were in the range of 8,400–28,000 with narrow distributions (PDI = 1.06–1.11). The copolymers were designated according to the degree of polymerization of ε-caprolactone, namely PEO114-b-PCL30, PEO114-b-PCL60, PEO114-b-PCL120, and PEO114-b-PCL200. All the prepared micelles were having diameters sizes less than 100 nm with narrow distributions. The highest drug solubilization was achieved with PEO114-b-PCL120, where the aqueous solubility of tacrolimus exceeded 300 μg/mL. Our results show a potential for PEO-b-PCL micelles as solubilizing vehicles for the delivery of tacrolimus.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1319016416300676Block copolymerPEO-b-PCLPolymeric micellesTacrolimusDrug delivery
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Raisuddin Ali
Abubakar Farah
Ziyad Binkhathlan
spellingShingle Raisuddin Ali
Abubakar Farah
Ziyad Binkhathlan
Development and characteriza
Saudi Pharmaceutical Journal
Block copolymer
PEO-b-PCL
Polymeric micelles
Tacrolimus
Drug delivery
author_facet Raisuddin Ali
Abubakar Farah
Ziyad Binkhathlan
author_sort Raisuddin Ali
title Development and characteriza
title_short Development and characteriza
title_full Development and characteriza
title_fullStr Development and characteriza
title_full_unstemmed Development and characteriza
title_sort development and characteriza
publisher Elsevier
series Saudi Pharmaceutical Journal
issn 1319-0164
publishDate 2017-02-01
description Tacrolimus is a potent immunosuppressant; however, it suffers from several problems such as poor water solubility (4–12 μg/mL), low and variable oral bioavailability in patients, and narrow therapeutic window that could not be solved by the currently available i.v. formulation (Prograf®). Moreover, Prograf® contains HCO-60 (PEGylated castor oil) as a surfactant, which is reported to cause several side effects including hypersensitivity reactions. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to investigate the potential of PEO-b-PCL polymeric micelles as alternative vehicles for the solubilization and delivery of tacrolimus. Four PEO-b-PCL block copolymers, with different molecular weights of PCL, were synthesized by ring opening polymerization of ε-caprolactone using methoxy polyethylene oxide (5,000 g mol−1) as initiator and stannous octoate as catalyst. Synthesized copolymers were characterized for their average molecular weights and polydispersity index by 1H NMR and gel permeation chromatography (GPC), respectively. Drug-free micelles of PEO-b-PCL were prepared through a co-solvent evaporation method using acetone as the organic co-solvent. Tacrolimus-loaded micelles were prepared using the same method with different initial amounts of drug. Prepared micelles were characterized for their mean diameter size and polydispersity of the micellar population by dynamic light scattering, and an HPLC assay was used to determine the encapsulation efficiency of tacrolimus. The average molecular weights of the synthesized copolymers were in the range of 8,400–28,000 with narrow distributions (PDI = 1.06–1.11). The copolymers were designated according to the degree of polymerization of ε-caprolactone, namely PEO114-b-PCL30, PEO114-b-PCL60, PEO114-b-PCL120, and PEO114-b-PCL200. All the prepared micelles were having diameters sizes less than 100 nm with narrow distributions. The highest drug solubilization was achieved with PEO114-b-PCL120, where the aqueous solubility of tacrolimus exceeded 300 μg/mL. Our results show a potential for PEO-b-PCL micelles as solubilizing vehicles for the delivery of tacrolimus.
topic Block copolymer
PEO-b-PCL
Polymeric micelles
Tacrolimus
Drug delivery
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1319016416300676
work_keys_str_mv AT raisuddinali developmentandcharacteriza
AT abubakarfarah developmentandcharacteriza
AT ziyadbinkhathlan developmentandcharacteriza
_version_ 1725446128664576000