4.7 Article

Evaluation and Comparison of Solid Lipid Nanoparticles (SLNs) and Nanostructured Lipid Carriers (NLCs) as Vectors to Develop Hydrochlorothiazide Effective and Safe Pediatric Oral Liquid Formulations

Journal

PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13040437

Keywords

solid lipid nanoparticles; nanostructured lipid carriers; hydrochlorothiazide; pediatric therapy; Gelucire; cytotoxicity; cellular uptake

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This study aimed to optimize solid lipid nanoparticles and nanostructured lipid carriers for the development of stable liquid formulations of hydrochlorothiazide suitable for pediatric therapy. By carefully selecting lipids and surfactants, the study successfully achieved improved drug encapsulation and release rates, with nanostructured lipid carriers showing better performance than solid lipid nanoparticles. Additionally, all selected formulations demonstrated good physical stability and lack of cytotoxic effects, suggesting their potential for intestinal absorption.
The aim of this study was the optimization of solid lipid nanoparticles (SLN) and nanostructured lipid carriers (NLC) in terms of physicochemical and biopharmaceutical properties, to develop effective and stable aqueous liquid formulations of hydrochlorothiazide, suitable for paediatric therapy, overcoming its low-solubility and poor-stability problems. Based on solubility studies, Precirol(R) ATO5 and Transcutol(R) HP were used as solid and liquid lipids, respectively. The effect of different surfactants, also in different combinations and at different amounts, on particle size, homogeneity and surface-charge of nanoparticles was carefully investigated. The best formulations were selected for drug loading, and evaluated also for entrapment efficiency and release behaviour. For both SLN and NLC series, the use of Gelucire(R) 44/14 as surfactant rather than PluronicF68 or Tween(R) 80 yielded a marked particle size reduction (95-75 nm compared to around 600-400 nm), and an improvement in entrapment efficiency and drug release rate. NLC showed a better performance than SLN, reaching about 90% entrapped drug (vs. 80%) and more than 90% drug released after 300 min (vs. about 65%). All selected formulations showed good physical stability during 6-month storage at 4 degrees C, but a higher loss of encapsulated drug was found for SLNs (15%) than for NLCs (<5%). Moreover, all selected formulations revealed the absence of any cytotoxic effect, as assessed by a cell-viability test on Caco-2 cells and are able to pass the intestinal epithelium as suggested by Caco-2 uptake experiments.

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