4.7 Article

Importance of Spray-Wall Interaction and Post-Deposition Liquid Motion in the Transport and Delivery of Pharmaceutical Nasal Sprays

Journal

PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 14, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics14050956

Keywords

nasal spray; droplet impaction; spray-wall interaction; CFD; spray modeling; spray delivery; droplet deposition; liquid layer; surface film dynamics; liquid motion

Funding

  1. Department of Health and Human Services, U.S. Food and Drug Administration [HHSF223201810144C]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A new computational fluid dynamics (CFD) framework was developed to simulate nasal spray delivery and evaluate the effectiveness of existing spray products. By considering the interaction between spray and the nasal wall surface, as well as the motion of the liquid after deposition, this new model provides a better understanding of the spray droplet behavior in the nasal cavity and can guide the development of more effective nasal drug delivery strategies.
Nasal sprays, which produce relatively large pharmaceutical droplets and have high momentum, are primarily used to deliver locally acting drugs to the nasal mucosa. Depending on spray pump administration conditions and insertion angles, nasal sprays may interact with the nasal surface in ways that creates complex droplet-wall interactions followed by significant liquid motion after initial wall contact. Additionally, liquid motion can occur after deposition as the spray liquid moves in bulk along the nasal surface. It is difficult or impossible to capture these conditions with commonly used computational fluid dynamics (CFD) models of spray droplet transport that typically employ a deposit-on-touch boundary condition. Hence, an updated CFD framework with a new spray-wall interaction (SWI) model in tandem with a post-deposition liquid motion (PDLM) model was developed and applied to evaluate nasal spray delivery for Flonase and Flonase Sensimist products. For both nasal spray products, CFD revealed significant effects of the spray momentum on surface liquid motion, as well as motion of the surface film due to airflow generated shear stress and gravity. With Flonase, these factors substantially influenced the final resting place of the liquid. For Flonase Sensimist, anterior and posterior liquid movements were approximately balanced over time. As a result, comparisons with concurrent in vitro experimental results were substantially improved for Flonase compared with the traditional deposit-on-touch boundary condition. The new SWI-PDLM model highlights the dynamicenvironment that occurs when a nasal spray interacts with a nasal wall surface and can be used to better understand the delivery of current nasal spray products as well as to develop new nasal drug delivery strategies with improved regional targeting.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available