4.6 Review

Non-Ionic Surfactants for Stabilization of Polymeric Nanoparticles for Biomedical Uses

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 14, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma14123197

Keywords

non-ionic surfactant; nanoparticle; polysorbates; poly(vinyl alcohol); poloxamer; stability; quality by design

Funding

  1. CONACYT grant [258043, CB A1-S-15759]
  2. Fundacion Miguel Aleman Valdes grant

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Surfactants play a crucial role in the manufacturing of polymeric nanoparticles, reducing emulsion droplet size and ensuring stability. Different non-ionic surfactants have varying applicability and biocompatibility, while also impacting pharmacokinetics beyond nanoparticle dispersion stabilization.
Surfactants are essential in the manufacture of polymeric nanoparticles by emulsion formation methods and to preserve the stability of carriers in liquid media. The deposition of non-ionic surfactants at the interface allows a considerable reduction of the globule of the emulsion with high biocompatibility and the possibility of oscillating the final sizes in a wide nanometric range. Therefore, this review presents an analysis of the three principal non-ionic surfactants utilized in the manufacture of polymeric nanoparticles; polysorbates, poly(vinyl alcohol), and poloxamers. We included a section on general properties and uses and a comprehensive compilation of formulations with each principal non-ionic surfactant. Then, we highlight a section on the interaction of non-ionic surfactants with biological barriers to emphasize that the function of surfactants is not limited to stabilizing the dispersion of nanoparticles and has a broad impact on pharmacokinetics. Finally, the last section corresponds to a recommendation in the experimental approach for choosing a surfactant applying the systematic methodology of Quality by Design.

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