Therapeutic systems lecture 5 b

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TRANSDERMAL THERAPEUTIC SYSTEMS (TTS) Prepared by: Sereta Campbell-Elliott B. Pharm; M Pharm. Sc

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Transcript of Therapeutic systems lecture 5 b

Page 1: Therapeutic systems lecture 5 b

TRANSDERMAL THERAPEUTIC SYSTEMS(TTS)

Prepared by: Sereta Campbell-Elliott B. Pharm; M Pharm. Sc

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WHY USE A TRANSDERMAL THERAPEUTIC DEVICE? Topical drug application was previously

used for local action; little or no systemic effects

Workers in an arms factory complained of headaches; drug absorption across the skin was observed

Aim of transdermal permeation is to deliver active drug/prodrug via a suitable vehicle to target sites in a controlled manner

Area of concern/barrier to drug movement is the skin

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Transdermal Permeation:Structure of the skin Serves to protect from noxious agents; limits drug entry, stabilizes

BP and temp Vulnerable to damage

Has 3 distinct layers:Epidermis: ≈ 0.1mm thick; multilayered; consists of dense layer of dead cells (‘brick’) with lipid-rich intercellular matrix (mortar) called stratum corneum or horny layer; lipoid in nature. This is relatively impermeable and is the principal barrier to percutaneous permeation; swells many folds when hydrated.

Dermis: 3-5 mm thick; has connective tissue pervaded with fibrous protein (elastin, collagen) embedded in a mucopolysaccharide. It has nerves, blood vessels, lymphatics and various glands; transport nutrients, waste, controls temp and BP, has defense cells and target site for systemic uptake

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Transdermal Permeation:Structure of the skin cont’d

Subcutaneous Tissue: contains fat and provides mechanical barrier to trauma and heat; synthesizes and stores high energy molecules

Routes of Penetration/ Permeation - Stratum Corneum (through lipoid matrix); major route- Skin appendages: sweat duct and hair follicle; due to small surface area (0.1% of skin) they are small contributors to percutaneous absorption; useful route for polar compounds, large compounds or colloidal preps

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Transdermal Permeation:Structure of skin and routes of permeation

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Advantages of TTS Provides constant drug levels Useful for drugs with short biological t1/2

Dosing frequency is reduced; improved compliance

Reduced risk of GI irritation or chemical/pH-dependent degradation of susceptible drugs

Avoids pre-systemic and first-pass metabolism in the liver

Relative ease in termination of drug input with patch removal

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Disadvantages of TTS

Due to effective barrier to permeation systems are limited to potent drugs (5-10 mg/day may be effectively given)

May have a ‘lag time’ – due to delay in accumulation and onset of action; not suitable for rapid alleviation of symptoms

Limited to drugs with short biological t1/2 and small volume of distribution (VD )

LogP values of 2.5 – 3.5 needed for maximal penetration through skin

Allergic responses and irritation at site (drug or patch components)

Cost

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TTS Design Modern design introduced in 1970’s

Basic design includes:- Impermeable backing- Drug reservoir- Release mechanism- Adhesive

Three types of TT device design: Reservoir-controlled, Matrix-controlled and Drug-in-Adhesive matrix

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TTS Design cont’d Reservoir/Membrane-Controlled Release

- Device has lag time in order to establish equilibrium between drug layer, membrane and adhesive; minimized with storage and produces a ‘burst effect upon use

- e.g. Transiderm-Nitro®, Estraderm ®, Nicorette

®, Androderm ®, Transderm-

Scop® Duragesic ®

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TTS Design cont’dMatrix-Controlled Release

Drug is dispersed in matrix or suspension

Adhesive layer has drug in equilibrium with matrix

e.g. Nitro-Dur®, Nicotinell®

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TTS Design cont’dDrug-in-Adhesive Matrix

Drug is dispersed in the adhesive matrix

Dispersed drug may be in various formulation e.g. crystals

e.g. Climara ®, Estraderm ® Mx, Minitran®, Nicoderm CQ ®

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Drug Release from TTS Drug permeation into the stratum corneum obeys

Ficks’ Law where:

dm = J = DCP dm/dt (J) – flux; amt

of drug that

dt h crosses stratum corneum

D – Diffusion Coeffient of the drug C – drug conc. in patch/surface

P – partition coeff. between patch and stratum corneum

h – diffusional path/ membrane thickness

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LAB ASSESSMENT PERCUTANEOUS DRUG DELIVERY

Studies are designed to determine:- Drug flux- Permeation route- Partitioning characteristics- Rate-limiting step : ?diffusion, ?partitioning, ?

skin structures, ?removal by vasculature- How skin conditions affect delivery- Nature of the vehicle : ? Modify drug release,?

Affect permeation

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LAB ASSESSMENT PERCUTANEOUS DRUG DELIVERY cont’d

In vitro methods:1. Involves the use of excised skin (rats, mice, guinea pigs, human skin) to measure passage of drug in a fluid bath

2. Use of artificial membranes (cellulose acetate, silicone rubber or systems designed to imitate lipoid stratum corneum; do not accurately represent complex nature of human skin

3. May use technique that releases drug in an immiscible phase and measure; only assesses drug/patch factors that affect release

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LAB ASSESSMENT PERCUTANEOUS DRUG DELIVERY cont’d

In vivo methods:1. Analysis of various compartments of the body

2. Monitoring for pharmacological or physiological response/reactions (allergic rxn, BP changes, gland

activity, de/pigmentation, systemic changes)

3. Monitor physical changes in stratum corneum (histological damage, surface loss)

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FACTORS INFLUENCING PERMEATION Biological Factors

- Condition of skin : healthy skin is impermeable but compromising skin interigty increases permeation. Inflammatory diseases may increase permeation while callouses/thickening may decrease permeation- Age : Little difference seen except in children and premies- Blood Flow: Not clinically significant- Variation in skin sites: affected by thickness and nature of stratum corneum, density of skin appendages- Metabolic activity of the skin: presence of enzyme systems may reduce amount of drug available for systemic action; true for about 5% topically applied drugs; process is useful for prodrug activation

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FACTORS INFLUENCING PERMEATION cont’d

Physicochemical Factors- State of skin hydration : Hydrated skin facilitates permeation; degree of occlusion is TTS > lipophilic oint > creams - Temp/pH : ↑ temp increases permeation; pH will affect ionization of weak acids/bases and affect permeation based on prevalence of unionized species; however balance must exist to maximize permeation to and out of dermal layer- Value of D: influenced by properties of drug and diffusion medium; drug must be able to diffuse betwn layers in patch, from patch to skin and across skin to vasculature; measures penetration rate- Drug Conc.: Permeation ↑with large concentration gradient - LogP value : Determines partitioning from patch to skin and from stratum corneum to dermal layer- Molecular size/shape: Small molecules penetrate faster; size and shape affect diffusion and partitioning rates

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NOVEL APPROACH TO ENHANCE PERMEATION Penetration Enhancers : temporarily reduces

permeability of skin; should be non-toxic, non-irritating, non-allergenic, immediate and predictable action, immediate skin recovery upon removal, compatible with drug/excipients, good solvent, aesthetic, inexpensive.

E.g. Chemical enhancers like surfactants, alcohols, fatty acids, azone.

Use of Prodrugs : may be used to improve a drugs’ LogP value and increase permeation; later hydrolysed to release active drug

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NOVEL APPROACH TO ENHANCE PERMEATION cont’d

Physical Enhancers- Iontophoresis :use of electrical potential gradient to increase permeation; current is applied and the ionized drug is repelled by electrode with like polarity; used for proteins/peptides

- Phonophoresis: use of ultrasound to drive drug molecules across skin

- Electroporation : application of a high-voltage pulse to increase permeation by opening aqueous pores in horny layer