4.7 Article

Oral transmucosal delivery of eletriptan for neurological diseases

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 627, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2022.122222

Keywords

Oral transmucosal delivery; Triptans; Dissolution; Enhancer; Tissue integrity; Cell uptake; Permeation pathway; Eletriptan hydrobromide; Caffeine; FITC-labeled dextran; Digitonin

Funding

  1. Knowledge Foundation (KK-stiftelsen, Sweden) [20170027]
  2. Gustaf Th Olsson foundation

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This article presents a study on the oral transmucosal delivery of eletriptan for the treatment of migraines. The study proposes the conditions required for transmucosal delivery and demonstrates the effectiveness and safety of this method through in vitro and cellular experiments.
Migraine is a highly prevalent neurological disease affecting circa 1 billion patients worldwide with severe incapacitating symptoms, which significantly diminishes the quality of life. As self-medication practice, oral administration of triptans is the most common option, despite its relatively slow therapeutic onset and low drug bioavailability. To overcome these issues, here we present, to the best of our knowledge, the first study on the possibility of oral transmucosal delivery of one of the safest triptans, namely eletriptan hydrobromide (EB). Based on a comprehensive set of in vitro and ex vivo experiments, we highlight the conditions required for oral transmucosal delivery, potentially giving rise to similar, or even higher, drug plasma concentrations expected from conventional oral administration. With histology and tissue integrity studies, we conclude that EB neither induces morphological changes nor impairs the integrity of the mucosal barrier following 4 h of exposure. On a cellular level, EB is internalized in human oral keratinocytes within the first 5 min without inducing toxicity at the relevant concentrations for transmucosal delivery. Considering that the pKa of EB falls within the physio-logically range, we systematically investigated the effect of pH on both solubility and transmucosal permeation. When the pH is increased from 6.8 to 10.4, the drug solubility decreases drastically from 14.7 to 0.07 mg/mL. At pH 6.8, EB gave rise to the highest drug flux and total permeated amount across mucosa, while at pH 10.4 EB shows greater permeability coefficient and thus higher ratio of permeated drug versus applied drug. Permeation experiments with model membranes confirmed the pH dependent permeation profile of EB. The distribution of EB in different cellular compartments of keratinocytes is pH dependent. In brief, high drug ionization leads to higher association with the cell membrane, suggesting ionic interactions between EB and the phospholipid head groups. Moreover, we show that the chemical permeation enhancer DMSO can be used to enhance the drug permeation significantly (i.e., 12 to 36-fold increase). Taken together, this study presents important findings on transmucosal delivery of eletriptan via the oral cavity and paves the way for clinical investigations for a fast and safe migraine treatment.

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