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Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of chlorambucil delivered in long-circulating nanoemulsion
53
Citations
20
References
2010
Year
Lipid PreparationNanomedicineEthylene GlycolPharmaceutical ScienceEngineeringMedicineLong-circulating NanoemulsionPharmaceutical NanotechnologyMicroemulsionNano-drug DeliveryBiomedical EngineeringOil Droplet SizeDrug Delivery SystemPharmacologyChromatography
Chlorambucil was incorporated into a nanoemulsion modified with poly(ethylene glycol) to improve its pharmacokinetics and tissue distribution, and thus enhance its therapeutic efficacy. A long-circulating nanoemulsion (LNE) was prepared using soybean oil, egg lecithin, cholesterol and PEG(2000)DSPE. The LNE had an oil droplet size <200 nm with a surface charge of -32.2 to -35.6 mV. Approximately, 97% of the chlorambucil was encapsulated in the LNE. Intravenous (i.v.) administration of the chlorambucil LNE to C57 B/6 mice showed improved pharmacokinetic parameters with 1.4-fold higher area under the plasma concentration-time curve (AUC) and 1.3-fold longer half-life compared to a non-PEG-modified nanoemulsion, and 2.7-fold higher AUC and 7.6-fold longer half-life compared to chlorambucil solution. Tissue distribution studies after i.v. administration with LNE showed a considerable decrease in drug uptake in the reticulo-endothelial system containing organs compared to non-PEG-modified nanoemulsion. Additionally, the chlorambucil delivered in LNE significantly enhanced therapeutic efficacy in the subcutaneous colon-38 adenocarcinoma tumor mouse model with no apparent increase in toxicity. This study suggests that LNE could produce remarkably improved pharmacokinetic profile and therapeutic efficacy of chlorambucil compared to non-PEG-modified nanoemulsion and solution.
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