STUDY OF THE EFFECT OF THE XCIPIENT CROSSCARMELOSE ON METFORMIN INTESTINAL PERMEABILITY BY AN IN SITU INTESTINAL PERFUSION MODEL IN RATS Sodium chloride.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
AQUEOUS EQUILIBRIA AP Chapter 17.
Advertisements

By Timina Olive Kayaviri Supervisor : Dr. Amugune
Salting in and Salting out of proteins and Dialysis (Isolation Of Lactate Dehydrogenase Enzyme ) BCH 333 [practical]
Solubility Product Constants Silver chloride, AgCl,is rather insoluble in water. Careful experiments show that if solid AgCl is placed in pure water and.
CHE MODULE 3 CHAPTER 15 LECTURE NOTES. Chemical Kinetics  Chemical kinetics - study of the rates of chemical reactions and is dependent on the.
Pharmacokinetics of Drug Absorption
Development and validation of an in vitro–in vivo correlation for extended buspirone HCl release tablets Sevgi Takka, Adel Sakr and Arthur Goldberg Journal.
Pharmacokinetics & Pharmacodynamics of Controlled Release Systems Presented By: Govardhan.P Dept. of pharmaceutics, University College of Pharmaceutical.
Chemometrics Method comparison
Chapter: Solutions, Acids, and Bases
AN ITERATIVE METHOD FOR MODEL PARAMETER IDENTIFICATION 4. DIFFERENTIAL EQUATION MODELS E.Dimitrova, Chr. Boyadjiev E.Dimitrova, Chr. Boyadjiev BULGARIAN.
Quality by Design Application of Pharmaceutical QbD for Enhancement of the Solubility and Dissolution of a Class II BCS Drug using Polymeric Surfactants.
The decision to harvest the grapes is imminent! What factors determine when the grapes are picked and when vinification (wine-making) begins? The graph.
Gokaraju Rangaraju College of Pharmacy
Week 6- Bioavailability and Bioequivalence
Quantity and Concentration Expression
Ionic strength is sometimes stated as having units of molal (or molar) and other times stated as being unitless, depending on the book you read. The easiest.
Pharmacokinetics Introduction
Copyright Sautter 2003 SOLUTIONS & CONCENTRATIONS WHAT IS A SOLUTION ? WHAT IS CONCENTRATION & HOW IS IT MEASURED ?
Changes in Temperatures By Jessa, Kyle, and Brandon.
Solubility Chapter 17. No only do acids and bases dissolve in aqueous solutions but so do ionic compounds –Many ionic compounds tend to be strong electrolytes.
Photosynthesis & e - transport Pathway thinking How?Why?
Renal Excretion of Aristolochic Acid I in the IPK
1 Abu Alam Ph.D. Advisory Committee for Pharmaceutical Science and Clinical Pharmacology July 23, 2008.
h C1 Cd Cr C2 Donor Receiver K Permeable membrane D C0 Blood Donor
Ch. 13/14: Solutions Describing a Solution’s Composition.
Solutions used in medical laboratory. O Solution is a homogeneous mixture of two or more substances. O Solute is the dissolved substance, whereas solvent.
Digestion & Absorption of Protein along the Intestinal Tract of Chicks Fed Raw and Heated Soybean Meal.
CHAPTER 15 REACTIONS AND EQUILIBRIA INVOLVING ACIDS, BASES, AND SALTS.
Lipophilicity & Permeability 김연수. Chapter 5. Lipophilicity.
The Biopharmaceutical Classification System (BCS)
Introduction What is a Biowaiver?
Chapter 6. pKa & Chapter 7. Solubility
Pharmacokinetics of Drug Absorption Dr. Basavaraj K. Nanjwade M. Pharm., Ph. D Department of Pharmaceutics Faculty of Pharmacy Omer Al-Mukhtar University.
Previous Knowledge – 30S Chem – Solutions, Unit 1, and Equilibrium Content – p
Chapter 17 Additional Aspects of Aqueous Equilibria.
1 Buffer. 2 pH pH = - log [ H + ] or pH = - log [ H 3 O + ] Example I What is the pH of solution with [ H + ] = 32 X M/L ? pH = - log [ H + ] pH.
Rates of Reaction In this unit you will investigate what makes chemical reactions go faster. At the end of the unit you will have a 2 hour practical test.
Unit 8 Solutions. What is a mixture? A Mixture is defined as a combination of two or more substances. The substances in a mixture can all be solids, like.
Correlation Between the Transdermal Permeation of Ketoprofen and its Solubility in Mixtures of a pH 6.5 Phosphate Buffer and Various Solvents Ref.: Drug.
1 16 Ionic Equilibria III: The Solubility Product Principle.
POSTER TEMPLATE BY: om New spectrophotometric method for determination of cephalosporins in pharmaceutical formulations Shazalia.
1 20 Ionic Equilibria III: The Solubility Product Principle.
1/20 PRESENTED BY BRAHMABHATT BANSARI K. M. PHARM DEPARTMENT OF PHARMACEUTICS AND PHARMACEUTICAL TECHNOLGY L. M. COLLEGE OF PHARMACY.
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 4.4 Indefinite Integrals and the Net Change Theorem.
THE ISOENZYME PROFILE OF LACTATE DEHYDROGENASE Assaying the serum levels of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activity combined with the results of other clinically.
Buffers. Introduction Buffers are important in biochemical processes. Whether they occur naturally in plasma or in the cytosol of cells, buffers assure.
Chapter 16 Solubility Equilibria. Saturated solutions of “insoluble” salts are another type of chemical equilibria. Ionic compounds that are termed “insoluble”
Stats Methods at IC Lecture 3: Regression.
Buffer.
Liquid Conductivity Measuring conductivity in saline water solutions.
- Pharmaceutical Equivalence Study
The Biopharmaceutical Classification System (BCS)
Effect of Diffusion Interactions between Droplets on Gas Absorption of Highly Soluble Gases in Sprays and Clusters T. Elperin, A. Fominykh and B. Krasovitov.
Introduction What is a Biowaiver?
Buffer.
Cocoa extract inhibits in vitro α-glucosidase activity:
Unit 4: Solutions and Kinetics
Scientific rationale for EU regulatory expectations concerning product composition in case of Class-I and Class-III medicinal products Dr Ridha BELAIBA.
Volume 119, Issue 6, Pages (December 2000)
“Normal Stomach” SGF to FaSSIF “Hypochlorhydric” SGF to FaSSIF
The Biopharmaceutical Classification System (BCS)
Validation of volume kinetic analysis of glucose 2
Unit 4: Solutions and Kinetics
Volume 101, Issue 4, Pages (August 2011)
Unit 6: Solutions Solubility.
Volume 58, Issue 3, Pages (September 2000)
Concentration of Solutions :
Voltage-Dependent Blockade of Connexin40 Gap Junctions by Spermine
Presentation transcript:

STUDY OF THE EFFECT OF THE XCIPIENT CROSSCARMELOSE ON METFORMIN INTESTINAL PERMEABILITY BY AN IN SITU INTESTINAL PERFUSION MODEL IN RATS Sodium chloride 9,2 g/L Potassium chloride 0,34 g/L Calcium chloride 0,19 g/L Monobasic sodium phosphate 0,76 g/L1/5 M (3,9 mL/L) Monoacid sodium phosphate 1/5 M (6,1 mL/L) Metformin solution added with Crosscarmellose (50 mL total volume) Metformin concentration (  g/mL) Added volume (mL) of a 0,1 mg/mL Croscarmellose solution) 0,30,40,6 Aceituno, A. PhD 1,2, Dibsi, A., Pharm D 1, Gajardo, A., Pharm D. 1 & Pezoa, R., PhD 2 1 [Universidad de Valparaíso], 2 [Instituto de Salud Pública de Chile] This research work was funded by the University of Valparaiso Research and Development Division and the Public Health Institute of Chile PURPOSE  To investigate on the permeability BCS classification of the drug Metformin and to study the effect of the potential ionic interaction between the excipient sodium Crosscarmellose (a common tablet disintegrant) and Metformin in pharmaceutical formulations by: an in situ intestinal perfusion model in rats (close loop). simultaneous perfusion of the drug solution and Crosscarmellose in a whole intestinal segment. Assessment of the permeability coefficients, calculated with and without the excipient co-infusion of the drug. METHODOLOGY In situ infusion model An in situ absorption model in rats was used to evaluate the intestinal permeability of Metformin, a provisional BCS class III drug. Three drug concentrations were assayed to investigate on the passive or active absorption mechanism of the drug: 50, 70 and 100 g/mL. A whole intestinal segment was isolated in anesthetized Sprague Dawley rats, washed with an electrolyte solution and cannulated at both distal ends. An isotonic buffered solution of Metformin or metformin plus Crosscarmellose was infused into the segment with the help of glass syringes, and the lumen concentration measured by a validated HPLC technique over a period of 30 minutes at 5 minutes intervals. At the end of this period, rats were euthanized following a previously approved protocol. To investigate the effect of co-infusion of the drug and Crosscarmellose, a concentration of the disintegrant was chosen to represent the amount normally present in conventional tablet formulations. The effect on the drug absorption and permeability was evaluated by statistical comparison of the apparent permeability coefficient of Metformin measured when infused with and without dissolved Crosscarmellose. CONCLUSIONS 1.The rat in situ (close loop) absorption model proved to be useful to predict potential interactions between drug and excipients commonly used in tablet formulation 2. The simultaneous presence of Croscarmellose and Metformin in a formulation might decrease its absorbed fraction and probably the bioavailability of poorly permeable ionic drug. 3.Crosscarmellose produced a concentration dependant effect on Metformin intestinal permeability that is obscured by the concentration dependant permeability of the drug itself. RESULTS The mean calculated permeability values of Metformin in the whole rat intestinal segment showed significant differences at lower initial drug concentrations (50 and 70 g/mL). Under the experimental conditions, the absorption of Metformin sulfate cannot be described as a passive process at these concentrations. Metformin permeability was dependent on the concentration, therefore the absorption process can be described as an apparent first order kinetic process combined with a saturable efflux. The first order kinetics was used to obtain the first order apparent constants. The isolated segment was first washed with 30 mL of a pH 7,4 solution (solution A) with the purpose to eliminate the remnant intestinal content and 30 mL solution B, in order to condition the intestinal mucosa prior to experiments: Solution A Solution B Proportion of Crosscarmellose aded Shown in the next tables are the volumes of Crosscarmellose added to the Metformin solution perfunded, keeping in all cases the drug/excipient ratio close to the one found in conventional formulations of the drug: The apparent absorption rate constant (Eq. 1) was calculated by fitting the lumen drug concentration left versus time data to a first order kinetics process after correcting the concentration for the passive water reabsorption. The intestinal permeability values were calculated considering the relation between k a and P eff (Eq. 2) where R is the radius of the perfused intestinal segment. Equation 1 Equation 2 50 µg/mL metformin solution 50 µg/mL metformin solution + Crosscarmellose time Log concentration time 70 µg/mL metformin solution 70 µg/mL metformin solution + Crosscarmellose 100 µg/mL metformin soluton 100 µg/mL metformin solution + Crosscarmellose Metformin predicted and experimental concentrations at different initial drug concentrations are depicted (Figs. 1, 2, 3). The determination coefficients of the first order regression was always higher than 0,95. Results showed that there was a statistical difference between the values of Metformin permeability coefficients when the drug was perfused with or without Croscarmellose. In the presence of Croscarmellose, there was a statistically significant decrease in intestinal permeability at a concentration of 50 and 70 g/mL (5.4 x versus 1.9 x cm/sec and 2.0 x versus 1.5 x cm/sec at 70, respectively). No difference in permeability coefficients was found at a concentration of 100 g/mL (table below). Likewise, there was dependence between the concentration of perfused Metformin and the permeability coefficients measured. Permeability coefficient (cm/seg) (mean + SD) Concentratio n (g/mL) MetforminMetformin + Crosscarmellose 50 5,4 * (3,2 * ) 1,9 * (8,7 * )  = 0,05 p < 0, ,0 * (1,1 * ) 1,5 * (4,9 * )  = 0,05 p < 0, ,4 * (7,0 * ) 1,4 * (1,0* )  = 0,05 p >0,05 Figure 4: theoretical ionic interaction between Metformin and Crosscarmellose Figure 1: Average Metformin concentrations in the luminal intestinal content versus time after perfusion (50 g/mL) Figure 2: Average Metformin concentrations in the luminal intestinal content versus time after perfusion (70 g/mL) Figure 3: Average Metformin concentrations in the luminal intestinal content versus time after perfusion (100 g/mL)