Development of drug alone and carrier-based GLP-1 dry powder inhaler formulations.

Int J Pharm

Drug Discovery, Delivery and Patient Care (DDDPC) Theme, Department of Pharmacy, School of Life Sciences, Pharmacy and Chemistry, Kingston University London, Kingston upon Thames KT1 2EE, United Kingdom. Electronic address:

Published: April 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study developed two types of dry powder inhaler formulations for GLP-1, one without any excipients and one with carriers, aimed at treating Type 2 diabetes through pulmonary delivery.
  • The aerosol performance was tested using different carriers, with spray freeze dried glycine-mannitol exhibiting better properties compared to commercial mannitol, while the carrier-free formulation showed promising fine particle fraction but lower overall GLP-1 dose delivery.
  • Results indicated that using engineered carrier-based formulations improved the delivery efficiency of GLP-1, suggesting potential for further research in animal models for Type 2 diabetes therapy.

Article Abstract

The study aimed to develop two types of dry powder inhaler (DPI) formulations containing glucagon-like peptide-1(7-36) amide (GLP-1): carrier-free (drug alone, no excipients) and carrier-based DPI formulations for pulmonary delivery of GLP-1. This is the first study focusing on the development of excipient free GLP-1 DPI formulations for inhaled therapy in Type 2 diabetes. The aerosolisation performance of both DPI formulations was studied using a next generation impactor and a DPI device (Handihaler®) at flow rate of 30 L min. Carriers employed were either a 10% w/w glycine-mannitol prepared by spray freeze drying or commercial mannitol. Spray freeze dried (SFD) carrier was spherical and porous whereas commercial mannitol carrier exhibited elongated particles (non-porous). GLP-1 powder without excipients for inhalation was prepared using spray drying and characterised for morphology including size, thermal behaviour, and moisture content. Spray dried (SD) GLP-1 powders showed indented/dimpled particles in the particle size range of 1-5 µm (also mass median aerodynamic diameter, MMAD: <5 µm) suitable for pulmonary delivery. Across formulations investigated, carrier-free DPI formulation showed the highest fine particle fraction (FPF: 90.73% ± 1.76%, mean ± standard deviation) and the smallest MMAD (1.96 µm ± 0.07 µm), however, low GLP-1 delivered dose (32.88% ± 7.00%, total GLP-1 deposition on throat and all impactor stages). GLP-1 delivered dose was improved by the addition of SFD 10% glycine-mannitol carrier to the DPI formulation (32.88% ± 7.00%-45.92% ± 5.84%). The results suggest that engineered carrier-based DPI formulations could be a feasible approach to enhance the delivery efficiency of GLP-1. The feasibility of systemic pulmonary delivery of SD GLP-1 for Type 2 diabetes therapy can be further investigated in animal models.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpharm.2022.121601DOI Listing

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