Formulation strategies to improve the efficacy of intestinal permeation enhancers.

Adv Drug Deliv Rev

UCD School of Veterinary Medicine and UCD Conway Institute, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland. Electronic address:

Published: October 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The use of chemical permeation enhancers (PEs) is a common method tested to improve the oral absorption of peptides, but only a few have made it to clinical trials, showing minimal increases in bioavailability.
  • Despite low bioavailability rates (~1%), recent FDA approvals for oral formulations of semaglutide and octreotide have occurred, highlighting that even small improvements can lead to success.
  • The key challenge lies in maintaining the necessary concentration of PEs and active agents at the intestinal epithelium, and addressing physiological factors like intestinal transit time and dilution to enhance oral absorption of these drugs.

Article Abstract

The use of chemical permeation enhancers (PEs) is the most widely tested approach to improve oral absorption of low permeability active agents, as represented by peptides. Several hundred PEs increase intestinal permeability in preclinical bioassays, yet few have progressed to clinical testing and, of those, only incremental increases in oral bioavailability (BA) have been observed. Still, average BA values of ~1% were sufficient for two recent FDA approvals of semaglutide and octreotide oral formulations. PEs are typically screened in static in vitro and ex-vivo models where co-presentation of active agent and PE in high concentrations allows the PE to alter barrier integrity with sufficient contact time to promote flux across the intestinal epithelium. The capacity to maintain high concentrations of co-presented agents at the epithelium is not reached by standard oral dosage forms in the upper GI tract in vivo due to dilution, interference from luminal components, fast intestinal transit, and possible absorption of the PE per se. The PE-based formulations that have been assessed in clinical trials in either immediate-release or enteric-coated solid dosage forms produce low and variable oral BA due to these uncontrollable physiological factors. For PEs to appreciably increase intestinal permeability from oral dosage forms in vivo, strategies must facilitate co-presentation of PE and active agent at the epithelium for a sustained period at the required concentrations. Focusing on peptides as examples of a macromolecule class, we review physiological impediments to optimal luminal presentation, discuss the efficacy of current PE-based oral dosage forms, and suggest strategies that might be used to improve them.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.addr.2021.113925DOI Listing

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