Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland
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Improving corneal permeability of dexamethasone using penetration enhancing agents: first step towards achieving topical drug delivery to the retina

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posted on 2024-10-25, 16:04 authored by Abhinav Thareja, Thomas LeighThomas Leigh, Jenni J. Hakkarainen, Helen Hughes, Carmen Alvarez- Lorenzo, Francisco Fernandez-Trillo, Richard J. Blanch, Zubair Ahmed
With an ever-increasing burden of vision loss caused by diseases of the posterior ocular segment, there is an unmet clinical need for non-invasive treatment strategies. Topical drug application using eye drops suffers from low to negligible bioavailability to the posterior segment as a result of static and dynamic defensive ocular barriers to penetration, while invasive delivery systems are expensive to administer and suffer potentially severe complications. As the cornea is the main anatomical barrier to uptake of topically applied drugs from the ocular surface, we present an approach to increase corneal permeability of a corticosteroid, dexamethasone sodium-phosphate (DSP), using a novel penetration enhancing agent (PEA). We synthesised a novel polyacetylene (pAc) polymer and compared its activity to two previously described cell penetrating peptide (CPP) based PEAs, TAT and penetratin, with respect to increasing transcorneal permeability of DSP in a rapid ex-vivo porcine corneal assay over 60 min. The transcorneal apparent permeability coefficients (Papp) for diffusion of pAc, and fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) conjugated TAT and penetratin were up to 5 times higher (p < 0.001), when compared to controls. When pAc was used in formulation with DSP, an almost 5-fold significant increase was observed in Papp of DSP across the cornea (p = 0.0130), a significant 6-fold increase with TAT (p = 0.0377), and almost 7-fold mean increase with penetratin (p = 0.9540). Furthermore, we investigated whether the PEAs caused any irreversible damage to the barrier integrity of the corneal epithelium by measuring transepithelial electrical resistance (TEER) and immunostaining of tight junction proteins using zonula occludens-1 (ZO-1) and occludin antibodies. There was no damage or structural toxicity, and the barrier integrity was preserved after PEA application. Finally, an in-vitro cytotoxicity assessment of all PEAs in human retinal pigment epithelium cells (ARPE-19) demonstrated that all PEAs were very well-tolerated, with IC50 values of 64.79 mM for pAc and 1335.45 µM and 87.26 µM for TAT and penetratin, respectively. Our results suggest that this drug delivery technology could potentially be used to achieve a significantly higher intraocular therapeutic bioavailability after topical eye drop administration, than currently afforded.

Funding

Ocular Research By Integrated Training And Learning

European Commission

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University of Birmingham, John Evans Fellowship

Spanish Ministerio de Educacion, Cultura y Deporte, Beatriz Galindo Award [BG20/00213]

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) studentship from the Centre for Doctoral Training in Physical Sciences for Health (EP/L016346/1)

Wellcome Trust

History

Data Availability Statement

Data will be made available on request.

Comments

The original article is available at https://www.sciencedirect.com/

Published Citation

Thareja A, et al. Improving corneal permeability of dexamethasone using penetration enhancing agents: first step towards achieving topical drug delivery to the retina. Int J Pharm. 2024;660:124305.

Publication Date

7 June 2024

PubMed ID

38852749

Department/Unit

  • Chemistry

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)