A two compartment in vitro release model for the testing of HIV microbicide formulations


Autoria(s): Malcolm, Karl; McConville, Christopher; Woolfson, David; Friend, David
Data(s)

01/05/2010

Resumo

BACKGROUND: In vitro release testing of vaginal formulations is usually performed in a one-compartment model (OCM) where the release medium, usually comprising pH-adjusted water, an aqueous surfactant solution or a solvent-water solution, provides sink conditions throughout the release experiment. Although this model is useful in evaluating the effect of formulation parameters upon release, it rarely reflects in vivo conditions. Here we report use of a two-compartment diffusion cell model (TCM, comprising a small volume donor, a large volume receptor, and separated by a model epithelial membrane) to more closely mimic in vivo vaginal release and tissue absorption following administration of a UC781 vaginal ring.<br/><br/>METHODS: Macaque-sized matrix silicone elastomer vaginal rings containing 100mg UC781 were prepared by injection molding, and in vitro release testing performed using both OCM (20mL simulated vaginal fluid, SVF) and TCM (5mL SVF in donor cell and variable quantities of Tween 80; silicone elastomer membrane; 100mL 3:2 ethanol/water in receptor cell). In the TCM, drug levels were measured by HPLC in both donor and receptor cells, representing fluid and tissue levels respectively. Rings containing 100mg UC781 and 10% w/w Tween 80 were also manufactured and tested.<br/><br/>RESULTS: The amount of UC781 released from rings was significantly influenced by the choice of release model. Greatest release (56mg/14 days) was measured in the ethanol/water OCM, compared with no measurable release into SVF only. Increasing the concentration of Tween 80 in the SVF medium (1, 3 and 5% w/w) led to increased UC781 release (11, 16 and 18mg, respectively), demonstrating that vaginal fluid solubility of UC781 may be rate-determining in vivo. In the TCM, UC781 accumulates in the receptor cell medium over time, despite not being measured in the donor medium containing the ring device. Incorporation of Tween 80 directly into the ring provided enhanced release in both donor and receptor cells.<br/><br/>CONCLUSIONS: Release of UC781 was influenced by the choice of release medium and the inclusion of Tween 80 in the ring. Although use of SVF-only in the OCM indicated no measurable UC781 release from rings, data from the TCM confirms that UC781 is not only released but is also capable of penetrating across the model epithelial membrane. The TCM may therefore provide a more representative in vitro release model for mimicking in vivo absorption.

Formato

application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/a-two-compartment-in-vitro-release-model-for-the-testing-of-hiv-microbicide-formulations(ed4b03cc-cfc5-4f5c-9f4d-3ba6cbfdf63b).html

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/ws/files/645539/Chris%20Diffusion%20Cell%20Abstract%20FINAL.docx

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

Malcolm , K , McConville , C , Woolfson , D & Friend , D 2010 , ' A two compartment in vitro release model for the testing of HIV microbicide formulations ' Paper presented at Microbicides 2010 , Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania , United States , 01/05/2010 - 01/05/2010 , pp. 1-1 .

Tipo

conferenceObject