Drug release from liposomal formulations
is governed by a complex
interplay of kinetic (i.e., drug permeability) and thermodynamic factors
(i.e., drug partitioning to the bilayer surface). Release studies
under sink conditions that attempt to mimic physiological conditions
are insufficient to decipher these separate contributions. The present
study explores release studies performed under nonsink conditions
coupled with appropriate mathematical models to describe both the
release kinetics and the conditions in which equilibrium is established.
Liposomal release profiles for a model anticancer agent, topotecan,
under nonsink conditions provided values for both the first-order
rate constant for drug release and the bilayer/water partition coefficient.
These findings were validated by conducting release studies under
sink conditions via dynamic dialysis at the same temperature and buffer
pH. A nearly identical rate constant for drug release could be obtained
from dynamic dialysis data when appropriate volume corrections were
applied and a mechanism-based mathematical model was employed to account
for lipid bilayer binding and dialysis membrane transport. The usefulness
of the nonsink method combined with mathematical modeling was further
explored by demonstrating the effects of topotecan dimerization and
bilayer surface charge potential on the bilayer/water partition coefficient
at varying suspension concentrations of lipid and drug.
Purpose
To better understand the mechanistic parameters that govern drug release from polymer micelles with acid-labile linkers.
Methods
A mathematical model was developed to describe drug release from block copolymer micelles composed of a poly(ethylene glycol) shell and a poly(aspartate) core, modified with drug binding linkers for pH-controlled release [hydrazide (HYD), aminobenzoate-hydrazide (ABZ), or glycine-hydrazide (GLY)]. Doxorubicin (Dox) was conjugated to the block copolymers through acid-labile hydrazone bonds. The polymer drug conjugates were used to prepare three polymer micelles (HYD-M, ABZ-M, and GLY-M). Drug release studies were performed to identify the factors governing pH-sensitive release of Dox. The effect of prolonged storage of copolymer material on release kinetics was also observed.
Results
Biphasic drug release kinetics were observed for all three micelle formulations. The developed model was able to quantify observed release kinetics upon the inclusion of terms for unconjugated Dox and two populations of conjugated Dox. Micelle/water partitioning of Dox was also incorporated into the model and found significant in all micelles under neutral conditions but reduced under acidic conditions. The drug binding linker played a major role in drug release as the extent of Dox release at specific time intervals was greater at pH 5.0 than at pH 7.4 (HYD-M > ABZ-M > GLY-M). Mathematical modeling was also able correlate changes in release kinetics with the instability of the hydrazone conjugation of DOX during prolonged storage.
Conclusion
These results illustrate the potential utility of mechanistic modeling to better assess release characteristics intrinsic to a particular drug/nanoparticle system.
A non-invasive fluorescence method was developed to monitor liposomal release kinetics of the anticancer agent topotecan (TPT) in physiological fluids and subsequently used to explore the cause of accelerated release in plasma. Analyses of fluorescence excitation spectra confirmed that unencapsulated TPT exhibits a red shift in its spectrum as pH is increased. This property was used to monitor TPT release from actively loaded liposomal formulations having a low intravesicular pH. Mathematical release models were developed to extract reliable rate constants for TPT release in aqueous solutions monitored by fluorescence and release kinetics obtained by HPLC. Using the fluorescence method, accelerated TPT release was observed in plasma as previously reported in the literature. Simulations to estimate the intravesicular pH were conducted to demonstrate that accelerated release correlated with alterations in the low intravesicular pH. This was attributed to the presence of ammonia in plasma samples rather than proteins and other plasma components generally believed to alter release kinetics in physiological samples. These findings shed light on the critical role that ammonia may play in contributing to the preclinical/clinical variability and performance seen with actively-loaded liposomal formulations of TPT and other weakly-basic anticancer agents.
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