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Brain Targeting of Temozolomide via the Intranasal Route Using Lipid-Based Nanoparticles: Brain Pharmacokinetic and Scintigraphic Analyses

138

Citations

23

References

2016

Year

Abstract

The aim of the present work was to investigate the efficacy of temozolomide nanostructured lipid carriers (TMZ-NLCs) to enhance brain targeting via nasal route administration. The formulation was optimized by applying a four-factor, three-level Box-Behnken design. The developed formulations and the functional relationships between their independent and dependent variables were observed. The independent variables used in the formulation were gelucire (X<sub>1</sub>), liquid lipid/total lipid (X<sub>2</sub>), Tween 80 (X<sub>3</sub>), and sonication time (X<sub>4</sub>), and their effects were observed with regard to size (Y<sub>1</sub>), % drug release (Y<sub>2</sub>), and drug loading (Y<sub>3</sub>). The optimized TMZ-NLC was further evaluated for its surface morphology as well as ex vivo permeation and in vivo studies. All TMZ-NLC formulations showed sizes in the nanometer range, with high drug loading and prolonged drug release. The optimized formulation (TMZ-NLCopt) showed an entrapment efficiency of 81.64 ± 3.71%, zeta potential of 15.21 ± 3.11 mV, and polydispersity index of less than 0.2. The enhancement ratio was found to be 2.32-fold that of the control formulation (TMZ-disp). In vivo studies in mice showed that the brain/blood ratio of TMZ-NLCopt was found to be significantly higher compared to that of TMZ-disp (intranasal, intravenous). Scintigraphy images of mouse brain showed the presence of a high concentration of TMZ. The AUC ratio of TMZ-NLCopt to TMZ-disp in the brain was the highest among the organs. The findings of this study substantiate the existence of a direct nose-to-brain delivery route for NLCs.

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