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Design and <i> in vitro</i> characterization of buccoadhesive drug delivery system of insulin
Author(s) -
Jasjeet Kaur Sahni,
S. Brito Raj,
Feroz Ahmad,
Roop K. Khar
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
indian journal of pharmaceutical sciences/indian journal of pharmaceutical sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.245
H-Index - 57
eISSN - 1998-3743
pISSN - 0250-474X
DOI - 10.4103/0250-474x.40333
Subject(s) - bioadhesive , permeation , chemistry , polyvinyl alcohol , chromatography , drug delivery , solubility , isopropyl alcohol , solvent , membrane , organic chemistry , biochemistry
A buccoadhesive drug delivery system of Insulin was prepared by solvent casting technique and characterized in vitro by surface pH, bioadhesive strength, drug release and skin permeation studies. Sodium carboxymethylcellulose-DVP was chosen as the controlled release matrix polymer. The optimized formulation J(4) contained Sodium carboxy methyl cellulose-DVP 2% (w/v), insulin (50 IU/film), propylene glycol (0.25 ml) and Isopropyl alcohol: water (1:4) as solvent system. Bioadhesive strength of the prepared patches was measured on a modified physical balance using bovine cheek pouch as the model membrane. In vitro release studies were carried out at 37 +/- 2 degrees using phosphate buffer pH 6.6, in a modified dissolution apparatus fabricated for the purpose. Cumulative amount of drug released from the optimized formulation J(4) was 91.64% in 6 hours. In vitro permeation studies were carried out on J(4) at 37 +/- 2 degrees using Franz diffusion cell. Cumulative amount of drug permeated from J(4) was 6.63% in 6 hours. In order to enhance the permeation of protein drug, different permeation enhancers were evaluated. The results suggested that sodium deoxycholate 5% (w/v) was the best permeation enhancer among those evaluated. It enhanced the permeation of insulin from 6.63% to 10.38% over a period of 6 hours. The optimized patches were also satisfactory in terms of surface pH and bioadhesive strength. It can also be easily concluded that the system is a success as compared to the conventional formulations with respect to invasiveness, requirement of trained persons for administration and most importantly, the first pass metabolism.

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