Transdermal and Dermal Drug Delivery Flashcards

1
Q

Topical treatment

A

– treatment localised to skin as the organ being treated
• Not just for drug delivery, but also
• Excipients
• Cosmetics

• Typically 2% or less of a topically applied drug is bioavailable

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2
Q

Transdermal

A

– treatment through the skin
• HRT
• Pain relief

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3
Q

Topical Preparations

A
  • Creams, Ointments, Gels
  • Antibiotic creams – treating superficial skin infections e.g. impetigo
  • Eczema – emollient creams and ointments, steroid creams
  • Antisepsis – chlorhexidine skin cleanser
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4
Q

Transdermal Preparations

A
  • Patches
  • Nicotine replacement therapy (NRT)
  • Glyceryl trinitrate (GTN)
  • Fentanyl, Buprenorphine
  • Hormone replacement therapy (HRT)
  • There have been 17 approved transdermal drugs in the USA and Europe between 1979-2014
  • The limited number of compounds reflects the difficulty of creating efficacious drugs in suitable formulations necessary for patient treatment
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5
Q

Skin structure

A

epidermis
dermis
Sc fat
Underlying tissue

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6
Q

Main features of skin

• Epidermis

A
  • Made up of 5 distinct layers, the stratum corneum, stratum lucidum, stratum granulosum, stratum spinosum, stratum basale
  • Includes the major penetration barrier (stratum corneum)
  • Up to 40% water (commonly 10- 25%), can be changed by disease, diet and environment
  • Varies in thickness around the body
  • Thickest – soles of feet (ca. 800µm)
  • Thinnest – scrotum, behind the ear, eyelids (ca. 6µm)
  • Melanocytes located in the basal layer, required for UV protection
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7
Q

Main features of skin

• Dermis

A
  • Majority of skin thickness
  • Connective Tissue
  • Support structures
  • Blood capillaries
  • Lymphatic system
  • Appendages
  • Sweat glands
  • Sebaceous glands
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8
Q

Appendages

A
  • Hair follicles

* Effectively bypass the stratum corneum barrier

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9
Q

Why are appendage not always used to deliver drugs through the skin

A
  • Only polar drugs can move through this route
  • Competing outward flow of sebum
  • Sebum is fatty and therefore may create an oil rich environment on the surface of the hair follicle, unsuitable for polar drugs to move across
  • Different areas of skin have different numbers of hair follicles – cannot guarantee uniformity of concentration delivered
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10
Q

Sweat Gland

A

• Passive, diffusion-controlled absorption across the sweat gland is highly unlikely

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11
Q

The Stratum Corneum Barrier

A

• Outermost layer of skin and the epidermis
• The main (>95%) barrier to percutaneous absorption of
exogenous chemicals
• Very thin (ca. 15 microns on the forearm) but it is a very
lipophilic and very thin stratified epithelium
• Thickest – soles of feet
• Thinnest – eyelids, scrotum, behind the ears

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12
Q

Stratum Corneum

A

• Dead (no nucleus), flattened and compacted corneocyte
cells surrounded by extensive lipid bilayers
• The main barrier to letting things in and out of the skin
• Often considered the only barrier
• Mediates transepidermal water loss (TEWL)
• Very dense, highly lipid tissue
• Very thin
• Typically 15-30µm in thickness

• The lipid system between the corneocyte cells serves as
a cement and as a skin barrier.
• Together with water, its four main components — fatty
acids, triglycerides, ceramides and cholesterol — form the
lamellar liquid crystalline lipid system

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13
Q

• The stratum corneum is such a difficult barrier to

penetrate because of:

A
  • Number and size of corneocytes
  • Presence of lipid bilayers
  • Presence of corneodesmosome “rivets”
  • Number of skin layers
  • Lipid cell envelope surrounding the corneocytes
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14
Q

Routes of drug permeation into and

across skin

A

Intracellular
Transcellular
Transappendageal

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15
Q

Factors affecting percutaneous absorption

• Physiological

A
  • Skin condition
  • Skin hydration
  • Occlusion
  • Skin stripping
  • Skin age
  • Regional variation
  • Species variation
  • Race
  • Gender
  • Cutaneous metabolism and blood flow
  • Skin temperature
  • Skin binding
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16
Q

Factors affecting percutaneous absorption

• Physicochemical

A
  • Drug concentration
  • Partition coefficient
  • Degree of ionisation (Henderson equation)
  • Solubility
  • Chemical structure
  • Molecular weight
  • Particle Size
17
Q

Factors affecting percutaneous absorption

• Drug/Vehicle

A
  • Drug/vehicle interactions

* Solubility of drug in excipients

18
Q

Formulations

A

Dusting powders
• Fine particle size with active ingredient
• Drying/lubricating
• For example antifungals such as miconazole

Liquids
• Soaks – active dissolved in an aqueous solvent
• Astringents
• Cooling
• Leaving a solid film (e.g. potassium permanganate; skin cleaners, antiseptics, and preparations for promotion of wound healing)

Applications
• Simple emulsions or solutions, usually containing a pesticide
• For example, benzoyl benzoate application

Lotions
• Aqueous solutions, suspensions or emulsions
• Cools inflamed skin
• Deposits and film of solid material
• For example, calamine lotion

Paints/Tinctures
• Ether concentration aqueous or alcoholic antimicrobial solutions
• For example trosyl nail solution (tioconazole 28% for fungal nail infections)

Collodions
• Usually organic solvents
• Mixtures of ether and alcohol
• Usually painted onto the skin and allowed to dry, leaving a flexible film
• Contains a polymer and an active
• For example, salicylic acid collodion for the treatment of warts and calluses

19
Q

Ampiphilic drugs

A

exhibit both lipid and aqueous properties

20
Q

Skin permeability

A

• “Like dissolves like”
• Drugs need to be lipophilic to penetrate into the stratum
corneum
• If they are too lipid they will stay there and not diffuse into the aqueous tissues (dermis)
• If they are too hydrophilic they will not get through the stratum corneum barrier
• A compromise is needed in physicochemical terms

21
Q

Intracellular route is best for

A

hydrophobic drugs

22
Q

transcellular route is best for

A

hydrophillic durgs

23
Q

epidermis is..

A

lipophilic/hydrophobic

24
Q

transappendageal route is best for

A

polar drugs