Duodenum-triggered delivery of pravastatin sodium via enteric surface-coated nanovesicular spanlastic dispersions: Development, characterization and pharmacokinetic assessments (original) (raw)

International Journal of Pharmaceutics, 2015

Abstract

Pravastatin sodium (PVS) is a hydrophilic HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor that is mainly absorbed from duodenum. PVS has a short elimination half-life (1-3h), suffers from instability at gastric pH, extensive hepatic first-pass metabolism and low absolute bioavailability (18%). The current work aimed to develop enteric surface-coated spanlastic dispersions as controlled-release duodenum-triggered systems able to surmount PVS drawbacks. PVS-loaded spanlastic dispersions were prepared by ethanol-injection method using span(®) 60. Tween(®) 60 and Tween(®) 80 were explored as edge activators. As a novel approach, the fine spanlastic dispersions were surface-coated with an enteric-polymer (Eudragit(®) L100-55) via freeze-drying. The systems were evaluated, before and after enteric-coating, for particle size, zeta potential, PVS entrapment efficiency (EE%), morphology and PVS release studies. PVS pharmacokinetics from the best achieved system and an aqueous solution were estimated in rats by UPLC-MS/MS. The best achieved enteric surface-coated spanlastic dispersion (E-S6) displayed spherical nanosized vesicles (647.60nm) possessing negative zeta potential (-6.93mV), promising EE% (63.22%) and a biphasic drug-release pattern characterized by a retarded-release phase (0.1N HCl, 2h) and a controlled-release phase (pH 6.8, 10h). The higher Cmax, delayed Tmax, prolonged MRT(0-∞), longer elimination t50% and enhanced oral bioavailability unravel E-S6 potential for oral PVS delivery.

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