Development and evaluation of colloidal modified nanolipid carrier: Application to topical delivery of tacrolimus, Part II – In vivo assessment, drug targeting, efficacy, and safety in treatment for atopic dermatitis

Pople, Pallavi V. and Singh, Kamalinder orcid iconORCID: 0000-0001-7325-0711 (2013) Development and evaluation of colloidal modified nanolipid carrier: Application to topical delivery of tacrolimus, Part II – In vivo assessment, drug targeting, efficacy, and safety in treatment for atopic dermatitis. European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics, 84 (1). pp. 72-83. ISSN 09396411

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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejpb.2012.11.026

Abstract

In atopic dermatitis (AD), topical anti-inflammatory therapy with skin barrier restoration to prevent repeated inflammatory episodes leads to long-term therapeutic success. Tacrolimus, although effective against AD, is a challenging molecule due to low solubility, low-penetration, poor-bioavailability, and toxicity. Part I of this paper, reported novel modified nanolipid carrier system for topical delivery of tacrolimus (T-MNLC), offering great opportunity to load low-solubility drug with improved entrapment efficiency, enhanced stability and improved skin deposition. Present investigation focused on restoration of skin barrier, site-specific delivery, therapeutic effectiveness, and safety of novel T-MNLC. T-MNLC greatly enhanced occlusive properties, skin hydration potential and reduced transepidermal water loss. This might help to reduce the number of flares and better control the disease. Cutaneous uptake and drug deposition in albino rats by HPLC and confocal laser scanning microscopy revealed prominently elevated drug levels in all skin strata with T-MNLC as compared to reference. T-MNLC demonstrated efficient suppression of inflammatory responses in BALB/c mice model of AD. Safety assessment by acute and repeated-dose dermal toxicity demonstrated mild keratosis and collagenous mass infiltration at the treatment area with repeated application of reference. Interestingly, T-MNLC showed no evident toxicity exhibiting safe drug delivery. Thus, novel T-MNLC would be a safe, effective, and esthetically appealing alternative to conventional vehicles for treatment for AD.


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