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Effect of hydroxyethyl starch on drug stability and release of semaglutide in PLGA microspheres.

Int J Pharm · 2024

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers found that adding hydroxyethyl starch (HES) to semaglutide microspheres improved the drug's stability and controlled its release over 44 days. Microspheres with HES had a high drug encapsulation rate of 94.38% and released 83.23% of the drug, preventing 30.65% of drug loss compared to microspheres without HES. The optimized formulation also provided nearly three weeks of blood sugar control with adequate safety.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalInt J Pharm, 2024
Citations9
Relative citation ratio2.52
NIH percentile80
Molecules semaglutide

Abstract

The degradation of peptide drugs limits the application of peptide drug microspheres. Structural changes of peptides at the water-oil interface and the destruction of their spatial structure in the complex microenvironment during polymer degradation can affect drug release and in vivo biological activity. This study demonstrates that adding hydroxyethyl starch (HES) to the internal aqueous phase (W) significantly enhances the stability of semaglutide and optimizes its release behavior in PLGA microspheres. The results showed that this improvement was due to a spontaneous exothermic reaction (ΔH = -132.20 kJ mol) facilitated by hydrogen bonds. Incorporating HES into the internal aqueous phase using the water-in-oil-in-water (W/O/W) emulsion method yielded PLGA microspheres with a high encapsulation rate of 94.38 %. Moreover, microspheres with HES demonstrated well-controlled drug release over 44 days, unlike the slower and incomplete release in microspheres without HES. The optimized h-MG2 formulation achieved a more complete drug release (83.23 %) and prevented 30.65 % of drug loss compared to the HES-free microspheres within the same period. Additionally, the optimized semaglutide microspheres provided nearly three weeks of glycemic control with adequate safety. In conclusion, adding HES to the internal aqueous phase improved the in-situ drug stability and release behavior of semaglutide-loaded PLGA microspheres, effectively increasing the peptide drug payload in PLGA microspheres.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 38471578 ↗

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