Anahita Fathi-Azarbayjani
1,2*, Kai Xin Ng
1, Yew Weng Chan
3, Sui Yung Chan
11 Department of Pharmacy, National University of Singapore, Block S4, level 2, Science Drive 4, 117543, Singapore.
2 Departent of Pharmaceutics, Faculty of Pharmacy, Urmia University of Medical Sciences, Urmia, Iran.
3 Department of Anaesthesiology, Singapore General Hospital, 169608, Singapore.
Abstract
Purpose: Lipid
suspensions as drug carriers, including conventional liposomes, ethosomes,
transferosomes, proniosomes, niosomes, PEG-PPG-PEG niosomes and stratum corneum
liposomes (cerosomes), were formulated and compared.
Methods: Lipid vesicles were formulated and assessed with
regards to enhancement of skin permeation of diclofenac and stability profiles
of the formulations. Formulation-induced changes of the
biophysical structure of excised human skin were monitored using the Fourier transform infrared
spectroscopy.
Results: The stability profiles of these suspensions over
12 weeks did not show any significant drug leakage from the vesicles of
interest (p > 0.05). FTIR observations indicated that the vesicles increased stratum
corneum (SC) lipid fluidization and altered protein conformation. Skin
permeability experiments showed that the free unencapsulated drug in the
cerosomal formulations caused significant increase in drug permeation across
the skin (p < 0.01). Low skin
permeability of drug from the other lipid suspensions could be due to the
entrapment of diclofenac within these vesicles which decreased the solubility
of the hydrophilic drug in the skin lipids and the partition coefficient of the
drug from these vesicles into the SC.
Conclusion: Optimal drug entrapment in vesicles or alteration of
the skin structure may not necessarily enhance the permeation of hydrophilic
drugs across the human skin. These lipid vesicles may be further
developed into carriers of both hydrophilic and hydrophobic drugs for topical
and transdermal delivery, respectively.