4.7 Article

Agomelatine-based in situ gels for brain targeting via the nasal route: statistical optimization, in vitro, and in vivo evaluation

Journal

DRUG DELIVERY
Volume 24, Issue 1, Pages 1077-1085

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10717544.2017.1357148

Keywords

Nasal route; direct nose to brain pathway; in situ gel; absolute bioavailability

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Agomelatine (AGM) is an antidepressant drug with a low absolute bioavailability due to the hepatic first pass metabolism. AGM-loaded solid lipid nanoparticles were formulated in the form of an in situ gel to prolong the intranasal retention time and subsequently to increase the absorbed amount of AGM. The optimized in situ gel formula had a sol-gel transition temperature of 31 degrees C +/- 1.40, mucociliary transport time of 27 min +/- 1.41%, released after 1 and 8 h of 46.3% +/- 0.85 and 70.90% +/- 1.48. The pharmacokinetic study of the optimized in situ gel revealed a significant increase in the peak plasma concentration, area under plasma concentration versus time curve and absolute bioavailability compared to that of the oral suspension of Valdoxan (R) with the values of 247 +/- 64.40 ng/mL, 6677.41 +/- 1996 ng.min/mL, and 37.89%, respectively. It also gave drug targeting efficiency index of 141.42 which revealed more successful brain targeting by the intranasal route compared to the intravenous route and it had direct transport percent index of 29.29 which indicated a significant contribution of the direct nose to brain pathway in the brain drug delivery.

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