Formulation and Optimization of Solid-Lipid Nano-particles of the Anticancer Drug Bortezomib
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.37285/ijpsn.2019.12.2.4Abstract
Solid-lipid nanoparticles (SLNs) are an alternative carrier system used for loading the drug for targeting, improving the bioavailability by increasing its solubility, and protecting the drug from presystemic metabolism. The avoidance of presystemic metabolism is due to the nanometric size range so that the liver cannot uptake the drug from the delivery system and is not metabolized by the liver. Bortezomib is an anti-cancer drug. Due to its poor oral bioavailability, presystemic metabolism and decreased half-life, it was chosen to formulate as the SLN system with the use of a 3-factor, 3-level Box–Behnken design, by hot homogenization followed by an ultrasonication method. Trimyristin (Dynasan-114), tripalmitin (Dynasan 116) and tristearin (Dynasan-118) were used as lipids and based on the results from the initial studies tripalmitin (Dynasan116) was selected as the lipid for the further studies along with phosphatidylcholine as surfactant and Poloxamer 188 as stabilizer. The optimized formulation (F1) was obtained with minimum particle size (204 nm), maximum entrapment efficiency (70.24) and drug loading (21.24). The optimised batches were further investigated by FTIR, DSC, XRD, SEM and stability. In vitro release studies showed that maximum cumulative drug release was obtained for F1 (99.74%). The optimized formulation Bortezomib followed zero-order release kinetics with a strong correlation coefficient (R2= 0.9994). The nanoformulation prepared under optimized conditions is in concurrence with the expected results. It is concluded that the SLN formulation can be used as a potential carrier for the effective delivery of Bortezomib.
Downloads
Metrics
Keywords:
Bortezomib, SLN, Cancer, Tripalmitin, Box-Behnken designDownloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
References
Hua Wang, Lifeng Xiao, Jianguo Tao, Venkat Srinivasan, Brendan F, Frank H, Babatunde O, Robert K and Lianping Xing (2018). Synthesis of a Bone-Targeted Bortezomib with In Vivo Anti-Myeloma Effects in Mice. Pharmaceutics 10: 154.
Ivanov AS, Shishkov SV and Zhalnina AA (2012). Synthesis and Characterization of Organic Impurities in Bortezomib Anhydride Produced by a Convergent Technology. Sci Pharm 80(1):67-75.
Mehnert W and Mader K (2001). Solid lipid nanoparticles: production, characterization and applications. Adv Drug Deliv Rev 47: 165e196.
Mohammad M, Hadi V and Parvin Z (2018). Bortezomib-loaded solid lipid nanoparticles: preparation, characterization and intestinal permeability investigation. Drug Dev Ind Pharm 44(10): 1598-1605.
Montgomery DC (2007). Design and Analysis of Experiments, 8th ed. John Wiley & Sons Inc., New York.
Myers RH, Montgomery DC and Anderson-Cook CM (2009). Response Surface Methodology: Process and Product Optimization Using Designed Experiments, 3rd ed. Wiley, US.
Pardeike J, Hommoss A and Muller RH (2009). Lipid nanoparticles (SLN, NLC) in cosmetic and pharmaceutical dermal products. Int J Pharm 366:170–84.
Piepel GF (1988). Programs for generating extreme vertices and centroids of linearly constrained experimental regions. J Qual Technol 20:125-139.
Soukharev RA (2007). Stability of lipid excipients in solid lipid nanoparticles. Adv Drug Deliv Rev 59: 411e418.