3 research outputs found
Electrosprayed mesoporous particles for improved aqueous solubility of a poorly water soluble anticancer agent: in vitro and ex vivo evaluation
open access articleEncapsulation of poorly water-soluble drugs into mesoporous materials (e.g. silica) has evolved as a favorable
strategy to improve drug solubility and bioavailability. Several techniques (e.g. spray drying, solvent evaporation,
microwave irradiation) have been utilized for the encapsulation of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) into
inorganic porous matrices. In the present work, a novel chalcone (KAZ3) with anticancer properties was successfully
synthesized by Claisen-Schmidt condensation. KAZ3 was loaded into mesoporous (SBA-15 and MCM-41)
and non-porous (fumed silica, FS) materials via two techniques; electrohydrodynamic atomization (EHDA) and
solvent impregnation. The effect of both loading methods on the physicochemical properties of the particles (e.g.
size, charge, entrapment efficiency, crystallinity, dissolution and permeability) was investigated. Results indicated
that EHDA technique can load the active in a complete amorphous form within the pores of the silica particles.
In contrast, reduced crystallinity (~79%) was obtained for the solvent impregnated formulations. EHDA
engineered formulations significantly improved drug dissolution up to 30-fold, compared to the crystalline drug.
Ex vivo studies showed EHDA formulations to exhibit higher permeability across rat intestine than their solvent
impregnated counterparts. Cytocompatibility studies on Caco-2 cells demonstrated moderate toxicity at high concentrations
of the anticancer agent. The findings of the present study clearly show the immense potential of
EHDA as a loading technique for mesoporous materials to produce poorly water-soluble API carriers of high payload
at ambient conditions. Furthermore, the scale up potential in EHDA technologies indicate a viable route to
enhance drug encapsulation and dissolution rate of loaded porous inorganic materials