Publication | Open Access
Antimalarial Activity of Orally Administered Curcumin Incorporated in Eudragit®-Containing Liposomes
56
Citations
41
References
2018
Year
Lipid PreparationNanomedicineEudragit-hyaluronan LiposomesPharmaceutical ScienceNanotherapeuticsAllergyPolymer-lipid NanovesiclesAntiparasitic AgentMedicineAntimalarial ActivityPharmaceutical NanotechnologyDrug Delivery SystemsInteresting PolyphenolNano-drug DeliveryPharmacologyDrug Discovery
Curcumin is an antimalarial compound easy to obtain and inexpensive, having shown little toxicity across a diverse population. However, the clinical use of this interesting polyphenol has been hampered by its poor oral absorption, extremely low aqueous solubility and rapid metabolism. In this study, we have used the anionic copolymer Eudragit® S100 to assemble liposomes incorporating curcumin and containing either hyaluronan (Eudragit-hyaluronan liposomes) or the water-soluble dextrin Nutriose® FM06 (Eudragit-nutriosomes). Upon oral administration of the rehydrated freeze-dried nanosystems administered at 25/75 mg curcumin·kg−1·day−1, only Eudragit-nutriosomes improved the in vivo antimalarial activity of curcumin in a dose-dependent manner, by enhancing the survival of all Plasmodium yoelii-infected mice up to 11/11 days, as compared to 6/7 days upon administration of an equal dose of the free compound. On the other hand, animals treated with curcumin incorporated in Eudragit-hyaluronan liposomes did not live longer than the controls, a result consistent with the lower stability of this formulation after reconstitution. Polymer-lipid nanovesicles hold promise for their development into systems for the oral delivery of curcumin-based antimalarial therapies.
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