Publication | Open Access
Flash NanoPrecipitation for the Encapsulation of Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Compounds in Polymeric Nanoparticles
72
Citations
33
References
2019
Year
NanoparticlesNanotherapeuticsEngineeringPolymer NanotechnologyHydrophilic CompoundsNanostructured PolymerPolymer NanocompositesChemistryBiomedical EngineeringNanomedicineChemical EngineeringPolymeric NpsTherapeutic NanomaterialsPolymer Nanostructured MaterialsBioimagingNp FormulationsDrug Delivery SystemPolymer ChemistryNanomanufacturingContinuous ProcessMicro-encapsulationFlash NanoprecipitationNanomaterialsPolymeric NanoparticlesPolymer SciencePharmaceutical NanotechnologyDrug Delivery SystemsNano-drug DeliveryMedicine
The formulation of a therapeutic compound into nanoparticles (NPs) can impart unique properties. For poorly water-soluble drugs, NP formulations can improve bioavailability and modify drug distribution within the body. For hydrophilic drugs like peptides or proteins, encapsulation within NPs can also provide protection from natural clearance mechanisms. There are few techniques for the production of polymeric NPs that are scalable. Flash NanoPrecipitation (FNP) is a process that uses engineered mixing geometries to produce NPs with narrow size distributions and tunable sizes between 30 and 400 nm. This protocol provides instructions on the laboratory-scale production of core-shell polymeric nanoparticles of a target size using FNP. The protocol can be implemented to encapsulate either hydrophilic or hydrophobic compounds with only minor modifications. The technique can be readily employed in the laboratory at milligram scale to screen formulations. Lead hits can directly be scaled up to gram- and kilogram-scale. As a continuous process, scale-up involves longer mixing process run time rather than translation to new process vessels. NPs produced by FNP are highly loaded with therapeutic, feature a dense stabilizing polymer brush, and have a size reproducibility of ± 6%.
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