4.1 Review

In vitro and ex vivo experimental models for evaluation of intranasal systemic drug delivery as well as direct nose-to-brain drug delivery

Journal

BIOPHARMACEUTICS & DRUG DISPOSITION
Volume 44, Issue 1, Pages 94-112

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bdd.2348

Keywords

ex vivo experimental models; experimental models; in vitro experimental models; intranasal drug delivery; nose-to-brain drug delivery

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The intranasal route of administration is a noninvasive method to deliver drugs into the systemic circulation and/or directly into the brain. In vitro and ex vivo models provide a means to investigate physiological and pharmaceutical factors that affect drug delivery across the nasal epithelium. Developing cost-effective pharmacokinetic models for intranasal drug delivery can improve drug product development and reduce the need for animal studies.
The intranasal route of administration provides a noninvasive method to deliver drugs into the systemic circulation and/or directly into the brain. Direct nose-to-brain drug delivery offers the possibility to treat central nervous system diseases more effectively, as it can evade the blood-brain barrier. In vitro and ex vivo intranasal models provide a means to investigate physiological and pharmaceutical factors that could play a role in drug delivery across the nasal epithelium as well as to determine the mechanisms involved in drug absorption from the nose. The development and implementation of cost-effective pharmacokinetic models for intranasal drug delivery with good in vitro-in vivo correlation can accelerate pharmaceutical drug product development and improve economic and ecological aspects by reducing the time and costs spent on animal studies. Special considerations should be made with regard to the purpose of the in vitro/ex vivo study, namely, whether it is intended to predict systemic or brain delivery, source and site of tissue or cell sampling, viability window of selected model, and the experimental setup of diffusion chambers. The type of model implemented should suit the relevant needs and requirements of the project, researcher, and interlaboratory. This review aims to provide an overview of in vitro and ex vivo models that have been developed to study intranasal and direct nose-to-brain drug delivery.

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