Sunitinib-eluting beads for chemoembolization: Methods for in vitro evaluation of drug release

[Display omitted] Drug-eluting microspheres are used for embolization of hypervascular tumors and allow for local controlled drug release. Although the drug release from the microspheres relies on fast ion-exchange, so far only slow-releasing in vitro dissolution methods have been correlated to in v...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of pharmaceutics 2015-03, Vol.482 (1-2), p.68-74
Hauptverfasser: Fuchs, Katrin, Bize, Pierre E., Denys, Alban, Borchard, Gerrit, Jordan, Olivier
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container_end_page 74
container_issue 1-2
container_start_page 68
container_title International journal of pharmaceutics
container_volume 482
creator Fuchs, Katrin
Bize, Pierre E.
Denys, Alban
Borchard, Gerrit
Jordan, Olivier
description [Display omitted] Drug-eluting microspheres are used for embolization of hypervascular tumors and allow for local controlled drug release. Although the drug release from the microspheres relies on fast ion-exchange, so far only slow-releasing in vitro dissolution methods have been correlated to in vivo data. Three in vitro release methods are assessed in this study for their potential to predict slow in vivo release of sunitinib from chemoembolization spheres to the plasma, and fast local in vivo release obtained in an earlier study in rabbits. Release in an orbital shaker was slow (t50%=4.5h, 84% release) compared to fast release in USP 4 flow-through implant cells (t50%=1h, 100% release). Sunitinib release in saline from microspheres enclosed in dialysis inserts was prolonged and incomplete (t50%=9days, 68% release) due to low drug diffusion through the dialysis membrane. The slow-release profile fitted best to low sunitinib plasma AUC following injection of sunitinib-eluting spheres. Although limited by lack of standardization, release in the orbital shaker fitted best to local in vivo sunitinib concentrations. Drug release in USP flow-through implant cells was too fast to correlate with local concentrations, although this method is preferred to discriminate between different sphere types.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2014.11.041
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Chemoembolization
Drug Liberation
Drug-eluting beads
Embolization, Therapeutic - methods
In vitro drug release
In Vitro Techniques
In vitro–in vivo correlation
Indoles - analysis
Microspheres
Pyrroles - analysis
Sunitinib
Time Factors
USP dissolution apparatus 4
title Sunitinib-eluting beads for chemoembolization: Methods for in vitro evaluation of drug release
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