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Polymeric micelles loaded with glyburide and vanillic acid: I. Formulation development, in-vitro characterization and bioavailability studies

Authors :
Jaskiran Kaur
Monica Gulati
Paras Famta
Leander Corrie
Ankit Awasthi
Sumant Saini
Gopal L. Khatik
Vidya G. Bettada
SubbaRao V. Madhunapantula
Keshav Raj Paudel
Gaurav Gupta
Dinesh Kumar Chellappan
Mohammed F. Arshad
Jon Adams
Kuppusamy Gowthamarajan
Kamal Dua
Philip M. Hansbro
Sachin Kumar Singh
Source :
International Journal of Pharmaceutics. 624:121987
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

The co-formulation of glyburide (Gly) and vanillic acid (VA) as such in the form of nanomedicine has never been explored to treat metabolic diseases including type 2 diabetes mellitus. Both the drugs possess dissolution rate-limited oral bioavailability leading to poor therapeutic efficacy. Hence, co-loading these drugs into a nanocarrier could overcome their poor oral bioavailability related challenges. Owing to this objective, both drugs were co-loaded in amphiphilic polymeric micelles (APMs) and evaluated for their biopharmaceutical outcomes. The APMs were prepared using mPEG-b-PCL/CTAB as a copolymer-surfactant system via the liquid antisolvent precipitation (LAP) method. The design of these APMs were optimized using Box Behnken Design by taking various process/formulation based variables to achieve the desired micellar traits. The release of both the drugs from the optimized co-loaded APMs was compared in different media and displayed a remarkable sustained release profile owing to their hydrophobic interactions with the PCL core. The in vitro cytotoxicity study of co-loaded APMs on Caco-2 cells revealed 70 % cell viability in a concentration-dependent manner. The preventive effects of Gly and VA co-loaded in APMs on glucose uptake was studied in insulin-responsive human HepG2 cells treated with high glucose. The co-loading of both the drugs in optimized APMs exhibited synergistic glucose-lowering activity (p 0.001) than raw drugs with low cytotoxicity on HepG2 cells within the test concentration. This could be attributed to an increase in the relative oral bioavailability of both the drugs in APMs i.e., 868 % for Gly and 87 % for VA respectively.

Details

ISSN :
03785173
Volume :
624
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Pharmaceutics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d88d4069408ad38244a62b01e2546d23