4.7 Article

Strat-M® positioning for skin permeation studies: A comparative study including EpiSkin® RHE, and human skin

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 647, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2023.123488

Keywords

Permeation assays; Strat-M (R); Human skin models; Raman spectroscopy; High -performance liquid chromatography; Lipid analysis; Excised human skin; Reconstructed human skin; Resorcinol

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In Vitro Permeation Testing (IVPT) plays a crucial role in studying skin penetration. Reconstructed human skin and synthetic membranes, such as Strat-M(R), are explored as alternatives to replicate human skin properties. Strat-M(R) demonstrates a closer resemblance to human skin in terms of steady-state fluxes, surpassing the performance of EpiSkin (R) RHE. Strat-M(R) offers a promising approach to enhance realism and reproducibility in dermatological product development.
In the development and optimization of dermatological products, In Vitro Permeation Testing (IVPT) is pivotal for controlled study of skin penetration. To enhance standardization and replicate human skin properties reconstructed human skin and synthetic membranes are explored as alternatives. Strat-M (R) is a membrane designed to mimic the multi-layered structure of human skin for IVPT. For instance, in Strat-M (R), the steady-state fluxes (J(SS)) of resorcinol in formulations free of permeation enhancers were found to be 41 +/- 5 mu g/cm(2)h for the aqueous solution, 42 +/- 6 mu g/cm(2)h for the hydrogel, and 40 +/- 6 mu g/cm(2)h for the oil-in-water emulsion. These results were closer to excised human skin (5 +/- 3, 9 +/- 2, 13 +/- 6 mu g/cm(2)h) and surpassed the performance of EpiSkin (R) RHE (138 +/- 5, 142 +/- 6, and 162 +/- 11 mu g/cm(2)h). While mass spectrometry and Raman microscopy demonstrated the qualitative molecular similarity of EpiSkin (R) RHE to human skin, it was the porous and hydrophobic polymer nature of Strat-M (R) that more faithfully reproduced the skin's diffusion-limiting barrier. Further validation through similarity factor analysis (similar to 80-85%) underscored Strat-M (R)'s significance as a reliable substitute for human skin, offering a promising approach to enhance realism and reproducibility in dermatological product development.

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