In vitro controlled release of finasteride from in situ polymer precipitation delivery system

Androgenic alopecia (AGA) is a prevalent disease which is commonly treated with oral finasteride. Nevertheless, the possible side effects and poor patient compliance associated with it made it an undesirable treatment. Injectable In situ polymer precipitation (ISPP) has been an attractive form of ad...

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Main Author: Seah, Xin Ying
Other Authors: Subramanian Venkatraman
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2015
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/65575
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-655752023-03-04T16:33:28Z In vitro controlled release of finasteride from in situ polymer precipitation delivery system Seah, Xin Ying Subramanian Venkatraman School of Materials Science & Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Materials Androgenic alopecia (AGA) is a prevalent disease which is commonly treated with oral finasteride. Nevertheless, the possible side effects and poor patient compliance associated with it made it an undesirable treatment. Injectable In situ polymer precipitation (ISPP) has been an attractive form of administration. It harnesses the benefits of being a non-invasive but localized delivery system. Its ease of manufacturing and tunable properties to incorporate a wide spectrum of different drugs sees promising applications in many treatments. This study aims to understand the effects of the various tuning parameters of an ISPP system on the release profiles of finasteride for the treatment of AGA. This is to investigate the possibility of a sustainable, efficacious alternative treatment for AGA patients. In this study, three major tuning parameters have been explored namely drug loading, addition of co-solvent and the use of long chain polymers. The burst release and release in the diffusion phase was found to plateau with increasing drug loading. Further investigation showed the inadequate sink condition provided by less than 100ml of buffer medium was the limiting factor for intrinsic drug release during burst release. Also during the diffusion phase, the large aggregates formed from drug loading beyond saturation resulted in a drug release that was lower than expected. Addition of co-solvent triacetin was found to suppress burst release amongst low drug loading formulations due to the slower phase inversion rate. Nevertheless, in higher drug loading formulations, the enlarged surface area of high triacetin formulation played a more influential role resulting in an unexpectedly higher burst release. In addition, higher triacetin content formulations seemed to give higher release in the diffusion phase. This was attributed to the earlier onset of polymer degradation phase of co-solvent systems. The use of long chain polymer saw high burst and a low subsequent release deemed long chain PLGA with no modifications an undesirable option in achieving a zero order release profile. A final assessment indicated two promising formulations 0.4g of F460 and 0.2g of F433 which could potentially deliver a continuous therapeutic dose for more than a month. However further experiments are required to verify the safety and efficacy of these formulations in vivo. Master of Engineering (MSE) 2015-11-16T00:58:53Z 2015-11-16T00:58:53Z 2015 2015 Thesis Seah, X. Y. (2015). In vitro controlled release of finasteride from in situ polymer precipitation delivery system. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. http://hdl.handle.net/10356/65575 en 106 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Materials
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Materials
Seah, Xin Ying
In vitro controlled release of finasteride from in situ polymer precipitation delivery system
description Androgenic alopecia (AGA) is a prevalent disease which is commonly treated with oral finasteride. Nevertheless, the possible side effects and poor patient compliance associated with it made it an undesirable treatment. Injectable In situ polymer precipitation (ISPP) has been an attractive form of administration. It harnesses the benefits of being a non-invasive but localized delivery system. Its ease of manufacturing and tunable properties to incorporate a wide spectrum of different drugs sees promising applications in many treatments. This study aims to understand the effects of the various tuning parameters of an ISPP system on the release profiles of finasteride for the treatment of AGA. This is to investigate the possibility of a sustainable, efficacious alternative treatment for AGA patients. In this study, three major tuning parameters have been explored namely drug loading, addition of co-solvent and the use of long chain polymers. The burst release and release in the diffusion phase was found to plateau with increasing drug loading. Further investigation showed the inadequate sink condition provided by less than 100ml of buffer medium was the limiting factor for intrinsic drug release during burst release. Also during the diffusion phase, the large aggregates formed from drug loading beyond saturation resulted in a drug release that was lower than expected. Addition of co-solvent triacetin was found to suppress burst release amongst low drug loading formulations due to the slower phase inversion rate. Nevertheless, in higher drug loading formulations, the enlarged surface area of high triacetin formulation played a more influential role resulting in an unexpectedly higher burst release. In addition, higher triacetin content formulations seemed to give higher release in the diffusion phase. This was attributed to the earlier onset of polymer degradation phase of co-solvent systems. The use of long chain polymer saw high burst and a low subsequent release deemed long chain PLGA with no modifications an undesirable option in achieving a zero order release profile. A final assessment indicated two promising formulations 0.4g of F460 and 0.2g of F433 which could potentially deliver a continuous therapeutic dose for more than a month. However further experiments are required to verify the safety and efficacy of these formulations in vivo.
author2 Subramanian Venkatraman
author_facet Subramanian Venkatraman
Seah, Xin Ying
format Theses and Dissertations
author Seah, Xin Ying
author_sort Seah, Xin Ying
title In vitro controlled release of finasteride from in situ polymer precipitation delivery system
title_short In vitro controlled release of finasteride from in situ polymer precipitation delivery system
title_full In vitro controlled release of finasteride from in situ polymer precipitation delivery system
title_fullStr In vitro controlled release of finasteride from in situ polymer precipitation delivery system
title_full_unstemmed In vitro controlled release of finasteride from in situ polymer precipitation delivery system
title_sort in vitro controlled release of finasteride from in situ polymer precipitation delivery system
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/65575
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