Prolonged delivery of nicotine in rats via nasal administration of proliposomes

Authors
Jung, BHChung, BCChung, SJLee, MHShim, CK
Issue Date
2000-05-03
Publisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Citation
JOURNAL OF CONTROLLED RELEASE, v.66, no.1, pp.73 - 79
Abstract
In order to achieve a prolonged delivery of nicotine to the systemic circulation, proliposomes containing nicotine base (NB-proliposomes) or nicotine hydrogen tartarate salt (NS-proliposomes) and a mixture of powdered nicotine hydrogen tartarate salt and sorbitol (1:9 mixture, MP) were administered intranasally to rats at a nicotine dose of 1 mg/kg. Proliposomes, lipid-sorbitol mixtures that form liposomes upon contact with water, were prepared according to previously established methods, and the mixture (MP) was prepared by mixing NS powder with sorbitol particles (105-350 mu m in size). Nasal absorption of nicotine from these formulations was very rapid (i.e. less than 10 min was required to reach plasma peaks) and showed substantially sustained plasma nicotine levels compared to saline solutions of NE and NS, and previously reported nasal nicotine sprays. The AUC values from the proliposomes and MP were comparable to those from the saline solutions of NE and NS. However, the mean residence time (MRT) and plasma half-life (T-1/2 beta) Of nicotine in the present study were much larger than those from the saline solutions. Thus, a prolonged delivery of nicotine to systemic circulation via the application of proliposomes or MP intranasally appears feasible. NB-proliposomes exhibited the best characteristics in terms of the area under the plasma concentration (AUC), MRT and T-1/2 beta of nicotine, which was followed by NS-proliposomes and MP. Retarded conversion of proliposomes and MP to liposomal emulsions and solution in the nasal cavity seems responsible, in part, for the sustained plasma nicotine concentrations, since the emulsions and solution yielded very short MRT and T-1/2 beta of nicotine. In addition, reduced metabolism to cotinine from the proliposomes and MP was apparently responsible for the sustained plasma nicotine levels. These dosage forms of nicotine appear to circumvent some of the shortcomings of transdermal patches (i.e. long T-max) and nasal sprays (i.e. short T-1/2 beta and physicochemical instability). (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords
ACTIVE ULCERATIVE-COLITIS; TRANSDERMAL NICOTINE; PHARMACOKINETICS; SYSTEM; PROPRANOLOL; ADDICTION; DISEASE; ACTIVE ULCERATIVE-COLITIS; TRANSDERMAL NICOTINE; PHARMACOKINETICS; SYSTEM; PROPRANOLOL; ADDICTION; DISEASE; nicotine; nicotine hydrogen tartarate; prolonged nasal delivery; proliposomes
ISSN
0168-3659
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/141384
DOI
10.1016/S0168-3659(99)00258-8
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KIST Article > 2000
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