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Development of a dry powder formulation for pulmonary delivery of azithromycin-loaded nanoparticles. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on developing a non-invasive inhalation method using polycaprolactone nanoparticles to deliver azithromycin for treating respiratory diseases like COVID-19 and pneumonia.
  • The nanoparticles were created via an emulsion technique, producing a fine powder formulation that shows high encapsulation efficiency and favorable size for pulmonary delivery.
  • Testing revealed the formulation maintains azithromycin’s antimicrobial effectiveness without causing cytotoxicity to human lung cells, indicating potential for improved treatment of lung infections.

Article Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has raised concern regarding respiratory system diseases and oral inhalation stands out as an attractive non-invasive route of administration for pulmonary diseases such as chronic bronchitis, cystic fibrosis, COVID-19 and community-acquired pneumonia. In this context, we encapsulated azithromycin in polycaprolactone nanoparticles functionalized with phospholipids rich in dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine and further produced a fine powder formulation by spray drying with monohydrated lactose. Nanoparticles obtained by the emulsion/solvent diffusion-evaporation technique exhibited a mean hydrodynamic diameter around 195-228 nm with a narrow monomodal size distribution (PdI < 0.2). Nanoparticle dispersions were spray-dried at different inlet temperatures, atomizing air-flow, aspirator air flow, and feed rate, using lactose as a drying aid, resulting in a maximal process yield of 63% and an encapsulation efficiency of 83%. Excipients and the dry powder formulations were characterized in terms of morphology, chemical structure, thermal analyses and particle size by SEM, FTIR, DSC/TGA and laser light diffraction. The results indicated spherical particles with 90% at 4.06 µm or below, an adequate size for pulmonary delivery. Aerosolization performance in a NGI confirmed good aerodynamic properties. Microbiological assays showed that the formulation preserves AZM antimicrobial effect against and pneumoniae strains, with halos above 18 mm. In addition, no formulation-related cytotoxicity was observed against the human cell lines BEAS-2B (lung epithelial), HUVEC (endothelial) and HFF1 (fibroblasts). Overall, the approach described here allows the production of AZM-PCL nanoparticles incorporated into inhalable microparticles, enabling more efficient pulmonary therapy of lung infections.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11513329PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/jpps.2024.13635DOI Listing

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