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Development of thiolated poly(acrylic acid) microparticles for the nasal administration of exenatide.

Drug Dev Ind Pharm · 2014

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers developed tiny particles (70–80 micrometers) to deliver the diabetes drug exenatide through the nose. About 80% of the drug was successfully trapped inside the particles, and it was released within 40 minutes. Compared to the drug in liquid form, the particles increased uptake by 2.6 times (unmodified) and 4.7 times (modified with cysteine). Tests showed the particles did not harm nasal tissue or affect the tiny hair-like structures that help clear mucus.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDrug Dev Ind Pharm, 2014
Citations10
Relative citation ratio0.46
NIH percentile27
Molecules exenatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to develop a microparticulate formulation for nasal delivery of exenatide utilizing a thiolated polymer. Poly(acrylic acid)-cysteine (PAA-cys) and unmodified PAA microparticles loaded with exenatide were prepared via coprecipitation of the drug and the polymer followed by micronization. Particle size, drug load and release of incorporated exenatide were evaluated. Permeation enhancing properties of the formulations were investigated on excised porcine respiratory mucosa. The viability of the mucosa was investigated by histological studies. Furthermore, ciliary beat frequency (CBF) studies were performed. Microparticles displayed a mean size of 70-80 µm. Drug encapsulation was ∼80% for both thiolated and non-thiolated microparticles. Exenatide was released from both thiolated and non-thiolated particles in comparison to exenatide in buffer only within 40 min. As compared to exenatide dissolved in buffer only, non-thiolated and thiolated microparticles resulted in a 2.6- and 4.7-fold uptake, respectively. Histological studies performed before and after permeation studies showed that the mucosa is not damaged during permeation studies. CBF studies showed that the formulations were cilio-friendly. Based on these results, poly(acrylic acid)-cysteine-based microparticles seem to be a promising approach starting point for the nasal delivery of exenatide.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 24131355 ↗

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