Development, Optimization and Characterization of Eudraguard<sup>®</sup>-based Microparticles for Colon Delivery

Development of pH-dependent systems for colon delivery of natural active ingredients is an attractive area of research in the field of nutraceutical products. This study was focused on Eudraguard<sup>® </sup>resins, that are methacrylate copolymers approved as “food grade” by European Co...

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Main Authors: Claudia Curcio, Antonio S. Greco, Salvatore Rizzo, Lorena Saitta, Teresa Musumeci, Barbara Ruozi, Rosario Pignatello
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-06-01
Series:Pharmaceuticals
Subjects:
DSC
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1424-8247/13/6/131
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spelling doaj-adeeb8933fcd4c5fb8b93ef1eaf8bc6c2020-11-25T03:54:28ZengMDPI AGPharmaceuticals1424-82472020-06-011313113110.3390/ph13060131Development, Optimization and Characterization of Eudraguard<sup>®</sup>-based Microparticles for Colon DeliveryClaudia Curcio0Antonio S. Greco1Salvatore Rizzo2Lorena Saitta3Teresa Musumeci4Barbara Ruozi5Rosario Pignatello6Department of Drug Sciences, Section of Pharmaceutical Technology, University of Catania, 95125 Catania, ItalyDepartment of Drug Sciences, Section of Pharmaceutical Technology, University of Catania, 95125 Catania, ItalyDepartment of Drug Sciences, Section of Pharmaceutical Technology, University of Catania, 95125 Catania, ItalyDepartment of Civil Engineering and Architecture (DICAR), University of Catania, 95125 Catania, ItalyDepartment of Drug Sciences, Section of Pharmaceutical Technology, University of Catania, 95125 Catania, ItalyDepartment of Life Sciences, University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, 41100 Modena, ItalyDepartment of Drug Sciences, Section of Pharmaceutical Technology, University of Catania, 95125 Catania, ItalyDevelopment of pH-dependent systems for colon delivery of natural active ingredients is an attractive area of research in the field of nutraceutical products. This study was focused on Eudraguard<sup>® </sup>resins, that are methacrylate copolymers approved as “food grade” by European Commission and useful for the production of food supplements. In particular, Eudraguard<sup>®</sup> Biotic (EUG-B), characterized by a pH-dependent solubility and Eudraguard<sup>®</sup> Control (EUG-C), whose chemical properties support a prolonged release of the encapsulated compounds, were tested. To obtain EUG microparticles, different preparation techniques were tested, in order to optimize the preparation method and observe the effect upon drug encapsulation and specific colonic release. Unloaded microparticles were initially produced to evaluate the influence of polymer characteristics on the formulation process; subsequently microparticles loaded with quercetin (QUE) as a low solubility model drug were prepared. The characterization of microparticles in the solid-state (FT-IR spectroscopy, differential scanning calorimetry and X-ray diffractometry) indicated that QUE was uniformly dispersed in a non-crystalline state in the polymeric network, without strong signs of chemical interactions. Finally, to assess the ability of EUG-C and EUG-B to control the drug release in the gastric environment, and to allow an increased release at a colonic level, suitable in vitro release tests were carried out by simulating the pH variations along the gastro-intestinal tract. Among the evaluated preparation methods, those in which an aqueous phase was not present, and in particular the emulsion-solvent evaporation method produced the best microparticle systems. The in vitro tests showed a limited drug release at a gastric level and a good specific colon release.https://www.mdpi.com/1424-8247/13/6/131food-grade acrylate polymersquercetinDSCFT-IRPXRDenteric release
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Claudia Curcio
Antonio S. Greco
Salvatore Rizzo
Lorena Saitta
Teresa Musumeci
Barbara Ruozi
Rosario Pignatello
spellingShingle Claudia Curcio
Antonio S. Greco
Salvatore Rizzo
Lorena Saitta
Teresa Musumeci
Barbara Ruozi
Rosario Pignatello
Development, Optimization and Characterization of Eudraguard<sup>®</sup>-based Microparticles for Colon Delivery
Pharmaceuticals
food-grade acrylate polymers
quercetin
DSC
FT-IR
PXRD
enteric release
author_facet Claudia Curcio
Antonio S. Greco
Salvatore Rizzo
Lorena Saitta
Teresa Musumeci
Barbara Ruozi
Rosario Pignatello
author_sort Claudia Curcio
title Development, Optimization and Characterization of Eudraguard<sup>®</sup>-based Microparticles for Colon Delivery
title_short Development, Optimization and Characterization of Eudraguard<sup>®</sup>-based Microparticles for Colon Delivery
title_full Development, Optimization and Characterization of Eudraguard<sup>®</sup>-based Microparticles for Colon Delivery
title_fullStr Development, Optimization and Characterization of Eudraguard<sup>®</sup>-based Microparticles for Colon Delivery
title_full_unstemmed Development, Optimization and Characterization of Eudraguard<sup>®</sup>-based Microparticles for Colon Delivery
title_sort development, optimization and characterization of eudraguard<sup>®</sup>-based microparticles for colon delivery
publisher MDPI AG
series Pharmaceuticals
issn 1424-8247
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Development of pH-dependent systems for colon delivery of natural active ingredients is an attractive area of research in the field of nutraceutical products. This study was focused on Eudraguard<sup>® </sup>resins, that are methacrylate copolymers approved as “food grade” by European Commission and useful for the production of food supplements. In particular, Eudraguard<sup>®</sup> Biotic (EUG-B), characterized by a pH-dependent solubility and Eudraguard<sup>®</sup> Control (EUG-C), whose chemical properties support a prolonged release of the encapsulated compounds, were tested. To obtain EUG microparticles, different preparation techniques were tested, in order to optimize the preparation method and observe the effect upon drug encapsulation and specific colonic release. Unloaded microparticles were initially produced to evaluate the influence of polymer characteristics on the formulation process; subsequently microparticles loaded with quercetin (QUE) as a low solubility model drug were prepared. The characterization of microparticles in the solid-state (FT-IR spectroscopy, differential scanning calorimetry and X-ray diffractometry) indicated that QUE was uniformly dispersed in a non-crystalline state in the polymeric network, without strong signs of chemical interactions. Finally, to assess the ability of EUG-C and EUG-B to control the drug release in the gastric environment, and to allow an increased release at a colonic level, suitable in vitro release tests were carried out by simulating the pH variations along the gastro-intestinal tract. Among the evaluated preparation methods, those in which an aqueous phase was not present, and in particular the emulsion-solvent evaporation method produced the best microparticle systems. The in vitro tests showed a limited drug release at a gastric level and a good specific colon release.
topic food-grade acrylate polymers
quercetin
DSC
FT-IR
PXRD
enteric release
url https://www.mdpi.com/1424-8247/13/6/131
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