Synergistic enhancement of testosterone transdermal delivery.

J Control Release

Department of Pharmaceutics, Monash University, 381 Royal Parade, Parkville, Victoria 3052, Australia.

Published: April 2005

In this study, the effects of occlusion, octisalate (OS), and propylene glycol (PG) on the in vitro skin permeability of testosterone (TES) have been investigated. TES (either alone or with OS 5% w/v) was applied as a finite dose to full-thickness neonatal porcine skin mounted in flow-through diffusion cells and the amount of TES appearing in the receptor solution (20% v/v ethanol) was determined over 24 h. The skin was occluded with a microscope glass cover slip and to determine the effect of PG, 400 microl of PG/water mixtures (of varying PG concentration) was applied. In addition, the effect of Solugel (a proprietary hydrogel containing PG 25% w/w) and Tegaderm (a semipermeable film dressing) on the permeation of TES was assessed. Occlusion had no effect on the permeation of TES, however, OS increased the flux of TES 2.9-fold. The concentration of PG which produced optimal TES flux was 20% v/v, and this concentration resulted in a 1.9-fold increase in TES permeation. By combining OS, PG, and occlusion, TES permeation was increased 8.7-fold, which was a synergistic enhancement. In addition, Solugel and Tegaderm, when applied to the skin, produced a similar enhancement in TES permeation to that produced by PG 25% w/w and occlusion.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jconrel.2004.12.007DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

tes permeation
12
tes
10
synergistic enhancement
8
20% v/v
8
addition solugel
8
25% w/w
8
permeation tes
8
permeation
5
enhancement testosterone
4
testosterone transdermal
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!