Effect of finasteride particle size reduction on its pharmacokinetic, tissue distribution and cellular permeation

Finasteride (FSD), a specific competitive inhibitor of the steroid type-II 5α-reductase enzyme, is used in treatment of benign prostate hyperplasia (BPH) and male pattern baldness. The drug is of limited solubility that affect its dissolution and bioavailability. The aim was to study the effect of F...

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Main Authors: Tarek A. Ahmed, Ahmed M. Al-Abd
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-01-01
Series:Drug Delivery
Subjects:
bph
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10717544.2018.1440446
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spelling doaj-5743085984db42399407aeff1cec9ca22020-11-25T02:06:36ZengTaylor & Francis GroupDrug Delivery1071-75441521-04642018-01-0125155556310.1080/10717544.2018.14404461440446Effect of finasteride particle size reduction on its pharmacokinetic, tissue distribution and cellular permeationTarek A. Ahmed0Ahmed M. Al-Abd1King Abdulaziz UniversityKing Abdulaziz UniversityFinasteride (FSD), a specific competitive inhibitor of the steroid type-II 5α-reductase enzyme, is used in treatment of benign prostate hyperplasia (BPH) and male pattern baldness. The drug is of limited solubility that affect its dissolution and bioavailability. The aim was to study the effect of FSD particle size reduction on the pharmacokinetic, tissue distribution and cellular permeation. An optimized drug micro- and nano-particles were developed, characterized, administered to group of rats, and systemic pharmacokinetic and tissue distribution within target and not-target organs were determined using near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy technique. Moreover, the cellular permeation of the prepared formulations through normal prostate epithelial cells was assessed and compared to pure FSD. The developed micro- and nano-particles were of 930 and 645 nm, respectively. Plasma maximum drug levels (Cmax) and overall exposure (AUC) of both formulations were not significantly higher than unformulated drug. However, micronized FSD achieved significant higher concentration within the target tissue (prostate) within the current study compared to pure drug and nano-sized formulation as well. Yet, this is explained by the higher sequestration ability of spleen tissue to the nano-sized formula compared to micro-sized FSD. At the cellular level, permeation of nano-sized FSD through prostate epithelial cells was superior to the unformulated FSD as well as the micro-sized drug formulation. FSD particle size reduction significantly influences its cellular permeation and to a lesser extend affect its systemic pharmacokinetics and tissue distribution after oral administration.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10717544.2018.1440446finasteridemicro and nanoparticlespharmacokineticstissue distributionbph
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tarek A. Ahmed
Ahmed M. Al-Abd
spellingShingle Tarek A. Ahmed
Ahmed M. Al-Abd
Effect of finasteride particle size reduction on its pharmacokinetic, tissue distribution and cellular permeation
Drug Delivery
finasteride
micro and nanoparticles
pharmacokinetics
tissue distribution
bph
author_facet Tarek A. Ahmed
Ahmed M. Al-Abd
author_sort Tarek A. Ahmed
title Effect of finasteride particle size reduction on its pharmacokinetic, tissue distribution and cellular permeation
title_short Effect of finasteride particle size reduction on its pharmacokinetic, tissue distribution and cellular permeation
title_full Effect of finasteride particle size reduction on its pharmacokinetic, tissue distribution and cellular permeation
title_fullStr Effect of finasteride particle size reduction on its pharmacokinetic, tissue distribution and cellular permeation
title_full_unstemmed Effect of finasteride particle size reduction on its pharmacokinetic, tissue distribution and cellular permeation
title_sort effect of finasteride particle size reduction on its pharmacokinetic, tissue distribution and cellular permeation
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Drug Delivery
issn 1071-7544
1521-0464
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Finasteride (FSD), a specific competitive inhibitor of the steroid type-II 5α-reductase enzyme, is used in treatment of benign prostate hyperplasia (BPH) and male pattern baldness. The drug is of limited solubility that affect its dissolution and bioavailability. The aim was to study the effect of FSD particle size reduction on the pharmacokinetic, tissue distribution and cellular permeation. An optimized drug micro- and nano-particles were developed, characterized, administered to group of rats, and systemic pharmacokinetic and tissue distribution within target and not-target organs were determined using near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy technique. Moreover, the cellular permeation of the prepared formulations through normal prostate epithelial cells was assessed and compared to pure FSD. The developed micro- and nano-particles were of 930 and 645 nm, respectively. Plasma maximum drug levels (Cmax) and overall exposure (AUC) of both formulations were not significantly higher than unformulated drug. However, micronized FSD achieved significant higher concentration within the target tissue (prostate) within the current study compared to pure drug and nano-sized formulation as well. Yet, this is explained by the higher sequestration ability of spleen tissue to the nano-sized formula compared to micro-sized FSD. At the cellular level, permeation of nano-sized FSD through prostate epithelial cells was superior to the unformulated FSD as well as the micro-sized drug formulation. FSD particle size reduction significantly influences its cellular permeation and to a lesser extend affect its systemic pharmacokinetics and tissue distribution after oral administration.
topic finasteride
micro and nanoparticles
pharmacokinetics
tissue distribution
bph
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10717544.2018.1440446
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