4.7 Article

A Composite System Based upon Hydroxypropyl Cyclodextrins and Soft Hydrogel Contact Lenses for the Delivery of Therapeutic Doses of Econazole to the Cornea, In Vitro

Journal

PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 14, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics14081631

Keywords

cornea; fungal keratitis; econazole; contact lens; cyclodextrin; composite system

Funding

  1. BBSRC [BB/N022106/1, BB/S004874/1]

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This study investigated a composite drug delivery system to enhance the corneal delivery of econazole for the treatment of fungal keratitis. The results showed that this delivery system significantly increased the amount of drug delivered to the cornea, potentially improving the clinical response to fungal keratitis.
Fungal keratitis, a disease in which the cornea becomes inflamed due to an invasive fungal infection, remains difficult to treat due in part to limited choices of available treatments. Topical eye drops are first-line treatment, but can be ineffective as low levels of drug reach the target site due to precorneal losses and the impenetrability of the cornea. The aim of this study was to determine the corneal delivery of econazole using a novel topical enhancement approach using a composite delivery system based upon cyclodextrins and soft hydrogel contact lenses. Excess econazole nitrate was added to hydroxypropyl-alpha-cyclodextrin (HP-alpha-CD) and hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin (HP-beta-CD) solutions, and the solubility determined using HPLC. Proprietary soft hydrogel contact lenses were then impregnated with saturated solutions and applied to freshly enucleated porcine eyeballs. Econazole nitrate 'eye drops' at the same concentrations served as the control. After 6 h, the corneas were excised and drug-extracted, prior to quantification using HPLC. Molecular dynamic simulations were performed to examine econazole-HP-beta-CD inclusion complexation and dissociation. The minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of econazole was determined against four fungal species associated with keratitis, and these data were then related to the amount of drug delivered to the cornea, using an average corneal volume of 0.19 mL. The solubility of econazole increased greatly in the presence of HP-beta-CD and more so with HP-alpha-CD (p < 0.001), with ratios >> 2. Hydrogel contact lenses delivered x2.8 more drug across the corneas in comparison to eye drops alone, and x5 more drug delivered to the cornea when cyclodextrin was present. Molecular graphics demonstrated dynamic econazole release, which would create transient enhanced drug concentration at the cornea surface. The solution-only drops achieved the least satisfactory result, producing sub-MIC levels with factors of x0.81 for both Fusarium semitectum and Fusarium solani and x0.40 for both Scolecobasidium tshawytschae and Bipolaris hawaiiensis. All other treatments delivered econazole at > MIC for all four fungal species. The efficacies of the delivery platforms evaluated were ranked: HP-alpha-CD contact lens > HP-beta-CD contact lens > contact lens = HP-alpha-CD drops > HP-beta-CD drops > solution-only drops. In summary, the results in this study have demonstrated that a composite drug delivery system based upon econazole-HP-beta-CD inclusion complexes loaded into contact lenses can achieve significantly greater corneal drug delivery with the potential for improved clinical responses.

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