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Lipopolysaccharide Polyelectrolyte Complex for Oral Delivery of an Anti-tubercular Drug.

AAPS PharmSciTech 2019 Februrary 12
Anti-tuberculosis drug delivery has remained a challenge due to inconsistent bioavailability and inadequate sustained-release properties leading to treatment failure. To resolve these drawbacks, a lipopolysaccharide polyelectrolyte complex (PEC) encapsulated with rifampicin (RIF) (as the model drug) was fabricated, using the solvent injection technique (SIT), with soy lecithin (SLCT), and low-molecular-weight chitosan (LWCT). The average particle size and surface charge of RIF-loaded PEC particulates was 151.6 nm and + 33.0 nm, respectively, with noted decreased particle size and surface charge following increase in SLCT-LWCT mass ratio. Encapsulation efficiency (%EE) and drug-loading capacity (%LC) was 64.25% and 5.84%, respectively. Increase in SLCT-LWCT mass ratio significantly increased %EE with a marginal reduction in %LC. In vitro release studies showed a sustained-release profile for the PEC particulate tablet over 24 h (11.4% cumulative release) where the dominant release mechanism involved non-Fickian anomalous transport shifting towards super case II release as SLCT ratios increased (6.4% cumulative release). PEC-tablets prepared without SIT presented with rapid Fickian-diffusion-based drug release with up to 90% RIF release within 4 h. Ex vivo permeability studies revealed that lipopolysaccharide PEComplexation significantly increased the permeability of RIF by ~ 2-fold within the 8-h study period. These results suggest successful encapsulation of RIF within a PEC structure while imparting increased amorphic regions, as indicated by x-ray diffraction, for potential benefits in improved drug dissolution, bioavailability, and dosing.

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