Publications by authors named "Christina Kostantini"

The Biorelevant Gastrointestinal Transfer (BioGIT) system is a useful screening tool for assessing the impact of dose and/or formulation on early exposure after administration of immediate release or enabling drug products with a glass of water in the fasted state. The objective of this study was to investigate potential limitations. BioGIT experiments were performed with five low solubility active pharmaceutical ingredients with weakly alkaline characteristics: mebendazole (tablet and chewable tablet), Compound E (aqueous solutions, three doses), pazopanib-HCl (Votrient™ tablet, crushed Votrient™ tablet and aqueous suspension), Compound B-diHCl (hard gelatin capsule, three doses) and Compound C (hard gelatin capsule containing nanosized drug and hard gelatin capsule containing micronized drug).

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Article Synopsis
  • * Four APIs were tested, including two compounds in various forms (tablets and capsules), and the study analyzed mean plasma area under the curve (AUC) values to evaluate their effectiveness.
  • * A strong correlation (R = 0.90) was found between bioavailability estimated by BioGIT AUC values and actual plasma AUC ratios, suggesting that BioGIT can be an effective early screening method for analyzing drug exposure variations.
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The first aim of this study was to evaluate the usefulness of optimized human fecal material in simulating sulforeductase activity in the lower intestine by assessing bacterial degradation of sulindac and sulfinpyrazone, two sulforeductase substrates. The second aim was to evaluate the usefulness of drug degradation half-life generated in simulated colonic bacteria (SCoB) in informing PBPK models. Degradation experiments of sulfinpyrazone and of sulindac in SCoB were performed under anaerobic conditions using recently described methods.

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Quercetin, a flavonoid with possible neuroprotective action has been recently suggested for the early-stage treatment of Alzheimer's disease. The low solubility and extended first pass effect render quercetin unsuitable for oral administration. Alternatively, brain targeting is more feasible with nasal delivery, by-passing, non-invasively, Blood-Brain Barrier and ensuring rapid onset of action.

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This paper summarizes efforts to (i) better understand the behavior of amorphous solid dispersions (ASDs) under real-life dosing conditions and (ii) evaluate the capability of in vitro methodologies to capture gastro-intestinal drug disposition. In a first part of the study, five healthy volunteers participated in a two-way crossover trial in which one Norvir® tablet (100 mg ritonavir) was dosed under fasted and fasted + PPI conditions. Gastrointestinal aspirates were collected from both the stomach and duodenum as a function of time to map the gastrointestinal drug disposition of the ritonavir ASD formulation and to evaluate the impact of reduced gastric acid secretion on formulation performance.

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