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Novel Nanoparticles Formulation for Cassette Dosing via Intravenous Injection in Rats for High Throughput Pharmacokinetic Screening and Potential Applications

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In recent years, one of the biggest challenges for pharmaceutical industry is to increase the speed of finding new medicines while at the same time controlling the ever rising cost of drug discovery and development. In order to increase the speed at which drug candidates are identified, high throughput assays (HTS) have been developed and have been widely implemented in the pharmaceutical industry. Cassette (or N-in-1) dosing for pharmacokinetic (PK) evaluation is the process of generating in vivo PK data in a higher throughput manner by dosing multiple compounds to individual animals. However, due to generally poor solubility of compounds being tested, high percentages of organic solvents are often used in the formulation vehicle in order to solubilize compounds for cassette studies. Utilization of high organic content in formulation vehicles can result in unwanted side effects and animal tolerability issues. The current study evaluates the suitability of using nanoparticles in an aqueous suspension for cassette IV dosing. Nanoparticles of 10 poorly soluble marketed drugs covering a wide range of clearances were prepared using an electrospray device and evaluated. PXRD, TGA and particle size data were obtained in order to ensure the quality for in vivo evaluation. Phosphate buffered saline (PBS) was used as the vehicle in IV cassette study using nanoparticles and pharmacokinetic estimates from this study were comparable to those from a traditional high organic formulation approach. The use of nanoparticles in an aqueous suspension formulation was demonstrated to be appropriate for cassette dosing.

Document Type: Research Article

Publication date: 01 October 2012

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  • Journal for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology (JNN) is an international and multidisciplinary peer-reviewed journal with a wide-ranging coverage, consolidating research activities in all areas of nanoscience and nanotechnology into a single and unique reference source. JNN is the first cross-disciplinary journal to publish original full research articles, rapid communications of important new scientific and technological findings, timely state-of-the-art reviews with author's photo and short biography, and current research news encompassing the fundamental and applied research in all disciplines of science, engineering and medicine.
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