Topical treatment plays a crucial role in psoriasis management, with non-adherence being a major barrier to treatment success. The fixed-dose combination of calcipotriol (CAL) and betamethasone dipropionate (BDP) represents the first-line choice in topical psoriasis treatment. A CAL/BDP cream based on polyaphron dispersion (PAD) Technology has emerged as a novel formulation for a more convenient topical treatment of psoriasis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: In psoriasis, poor treatment adherence is frequently related to low efficacy and limited cosmetic acceptability from the patients' perspective. This study aimed to characterize the sensorial attributes of a calcipotriol (CAL) and betamethasone dipropionate (BDP)-cream vehicle based on polyaphron dispersion (PAD) Technology and to compare them with the conventional ointment and oleogel formulations for psoriasis.
Methods: A panel of 16 experts assessed sensory properties at four different stages: appearance, pick up, rub out and afterfeel.
Topical formulation and delivery technologies for pharmaceutical application should simultaneously address efficacy, safety and convenience of therapy. This has historically proven to be challenging, since formulation features that drive efficacy often have undesirable consequences for safety and convenience and vice versa. Polyaphron dispersion (PAD) technology is a novel topical formulation and drug delivery system developed with the purpose of preserving these key attributes.
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