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Nanoparticulate Drug Delivery Strategies to Address Intestinal Cytochrome P450 CYP3A4 Metabolism towards Personalized Medicine.

Authors :
Zhang, Rui Xue
Dong, Ken
Wang, Zhigao
Miao, Ruimin
Lu, Weijia
Wu, Xiao Yu
Source :
Pharmaceutics. Aug2021, Vol. 13 Issue 8, p1261. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Drug dosing in clinical practice, which determines optimal efficacy, toxicity or ineffectiveness, is critical to patients' outcomes. However, many orally administered therapeutic drugs are susceptible to biotransformation by a group of important oxidative enzymes, known as cytochrome P450s (CYPs). In particular, CYP3A4 is a low specificity isoenzyme of the CYPs family, which contributes to the metabolism of approximately 50% of all marketed drugs. Induction or inhibition of CYP3A4 activity results in the varied oral bioavailability and unwanted drug-drug, drug-food, and drug-herb interactions. This review explores the need for addressing intestinal CYP3A4 metabolism and investigates the opportunities to incorporate lipid-based oral drug delivery to enable precise dosing. A variety of lipid- and lipid-polymer hybrid-nanoparticles are highlighted to improve drug bioavailability. These drug carriers are designed to target different intestinal regions, including (1) local saturation or inhibition of CYP3A4 activity at duodenum and proximal jejunum; (2) CYP3A4 bypass via lymphatic absorption; (3) pH-responsive drug release or vitamin-B12 targeted cellular uptake in the distal intestine. Exploitation of lipidic nanosystems not only revives drugs removed from clinical practice due to serious drug-drug interactions, but also provide alternative approaches to reduce pharmacokinetic variability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19994923
Volume :
13
Issue :
8
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Pharmaceutics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
152128274
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics13081261