4.4 Review

Enhancing oral bioavailability of poorly soluble drugs with mesoporous silica based systems: opportunities and challenges

Journal

DRUG DEVELOPMENT AND INDUSTRIAL PHARMACY
Volume 45, Issue 3, Pages 349-358

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/03639045.2018.1542709

Keywords

Mesoporous silica; poorly soluble drugs; drug dissolution; bioavailability; oral drug delivery; supersaturation; precipitation inhibitors

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Porous silica-based drug delivery systems have shown considerable promise for improving the oral delivery of poorly water-soluble drugs. More specifically, micro- and meso-porous silica carriers have high surface areas with associated ability to physically adsorb high-drug loads in a molecular or amorphous form; this allows molecular state drug release in aqueous gastrointestinal environments, potential for supersaturation, and hence facilitates enhanced absorption and increased bioavailability. This review focuses primarily on the ability of porous silica materials to modulate in vitro drug release and enhance in vivo biopharmaceutical performance. The key considerations identified and addressed are the physicochemical properties of the porous silica materials (e.g. the particle and pore size, shape, and surface chemistry), drug specific properties (e.g. pKa, solubility, and nature of interactions with the silica carrier), potential for both immediate and controlled release, drug release mechanisms, potential for surface functionalization and inclusion of precipitation inhibitors, and importance of utilizing relevant and effective in vitro dissolution methods with discriminating dissolution media that provides guidance for in vivo outcomes (i.e. IVIVC).

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