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  • Title: Physicochemical and pharmacokinetic characterization of amorphous solid dispersion of tranilast with enhanced solubility in gastric fluid and improved oral bioavailability.
    Author: Onoue S, Kojo Y, Aoki Y, Kawabata Y, Yamauchi Y, Yamada S.
    Journal: Drug Metab Pharmacokinet; 2012; 27(4):379-87. PubMed ID: 22240843.
    Abstract:
    In the present study, amorphous solid dispersion (ASD) formulations of tranilast (TL) with 8 hydrophilic polymers were prepared by a solvent evaporation method with the aim of improving dissolution behavior in gastric fluid and thereby enhancing oral bioavailability. The physicochemical properties were characterized with a focus on morphology, crystallinity, thermal behavior, dissolution, drug-polymer interaction, and stability. Of all TL formulations, ASD formulation with Eudragit EPO exhibited the highest improvement in dissolution behavior with a 3,000-fold increase in the first-order dissolution rate under acidic conditions (pH 1.2). Spectroscopic studies using infrared and near-infrared analyses revealed the drug-polymer interaction in the Eudragit EPO-based ASD formulation. On the basis of dissolution, crystallinity, and stability data, the maximum allowable drug load in the Eudragit EPO-based ASD formulation was deduced to be ca. 50%. Pharmacokinetic profiling of orally dosed TL formulations in rats was also carried out using UPLC/ESI-MS. After oral administration of the Eudragit EPO-based ASD formulation in rats, enhanced TL exposure was observed with an increase of oral bioavailability by 19-fold, and the variation of AUC was ca. 4 times lower than that with crystalline TL. With these data, the ASD approach could be a viable formulation strategy for enhancing the wettability and oral bioavailability of TL, resulting in improved therapeutic potential of TL for the treatment of inflammatory diseases.
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