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Synergistic Effect of Acetazolamide-(2-hydroxy)propyl ß-Cyclodextrin in Timolol Liposomes for Decreasing and Prolonging Intraocular Pressure Levels

Authors

ARROYO GARCÍA, CARMEN MARTINA, Quinteros, Daniela , Palma, Santiago D. , Jimenez de los Santos, Cesareo J. , Moyano, Jose R. , Rabasco, Antonio M. , Gonzalez-Rodriguez, Maria Luisa

External publication

No

Means

Pharmaceutics

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

JCR Impact

6.525

SJR Impact

0.922

Publication date

01/12/2021

ISI

000736348700001

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to design, for the first time, a co-loaded liposomal formulation (CLL) for treatment of glaucoma including timolol maleate (TM) in the lipid bilayer and acetazolamide (Acz)-(2-hydroxy)propyl beta-cyclodextrin (HP beta CD) complexes (AczHP) solubilized in the aqueous core of liposomes. Formulations with TM (TM-L) and AczHP (AczHP-L), separately, were also prepared and characterized. A preliminary study comprising the Acz/HP beta CD complexes and their interaction with cholesterol (a component of the lipid bilayer) was realized. Then, a screening study on formulation factors affecting the quality of the product was carried out following the design of the experiment methodology. In addition, in vitro release and permeation studies and in vivo lowering intraocular pressure (IOP) studies were performed. The results of the inclusion complexation behavior, characterization, and binding ability of Acz with HP beta CD showed that HP beta CD could enhance the water solubility of Acz despite the weak binding ability of the complex. Ch disturbed the stability and solubility parameters of Acz due to the fact of its competence by CD; thus, Chems (steroid derivative) was selected for further liposome formulation studies. The optimization of the lipid bilayer composition (DDAB, 0.0173 mmol and no double loading) and the extrusion as methods to reduce vesicle size were crucial for improving the physico-chemical properties and encapsulation efficiency of both drugs. In vitro release and permeation studies demonstrated that the CLL formulation showed improvement in in vitro drug release and permeation compared to the liposomal formulations with a single drug (TM-L and AczHP-L) and the standard solutions (TM-S and AczHP-S). CLL showed high efficacy in reducing and prolonging IOP, suggesting that the synergistic effect of TM and Acz on aqueous humor retention and the presence of this cyclodextrin and liposomes as permeation enhancers are responsible for the success of this strategy of co-loading for glaucoma therapy.

Keywords

liposome; glaucoma; co-loading; timolol; acetazolamide; design of experiments; intraocular pressure; (2-hydroxy)propyl beta-cyclodextrin; cyclodextrin competence; (PNMR)-P-31; drug delivery

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