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1.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39107674

RESUMEN

Opioid-based medications remain the mainstay of post-operative pain management, even though they are associated with a plethora of adverse effects including addiction, nausea, constipation, cognitive impairment, respiratory depression, and accidental death due to overdose. Local anesthetics are effective at controlling the intense pain after surgery but their short duration of effect limits their clinical utility in post-operative pain management. In this manuscript, an optimized injectable oleogel-based formulation of bupivacaine for multi-day post-operative pain management was characterized on the benchtop and assessed in two clinically-relevant porcine post-operative pain models. Benchtop characterization verified the optimized oleogel-based bupivacaine formulation design, demonstrating a homogenous stable oleogel with sufficient injectability due to shear-thinning properties, high drug loading capacity and first-order drug release kinetics over 5 days. In vivo assessment in two pig post-operative pain models demonstrated that the oleogel-based bupivacaine formulation can provide statistically significant multi-day analgesia in two routes of administration: local instillation directly into a surgical site and ultrasound-guided peripheral nerve block injection. Pharmacokinetic assessment of ALX005 found that Cmax values were not statistically different from the bupivacaine HCl control, with no clinical signs of local anesthetic systemic toxicity observed, when administering up to 2.7 and 8.1 times the control dose of bupivacaine HCl. This study demonstrates the pre-clinical safety and efficacy of an injectable oleogel-based bupivacaine formulation and explores its utility as a single-administration long-acting local anesthetic product for post-operative pain management that can be used in both local and regional anesthetic applications.

2.
Int J Pharm ; 637: 122887, 2023 Apr 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36990171

RESUMEN

This manuscript systematically assesses three different glycerides (tripalmitin, glyceryl monostearate, and a blend of mono-, di- and triesters of palmitic and stearic acids (Geleol™)) as potential gelator structuring agents of medium-chain triglyceride oil to form an oleogel-based injectable long-acting local anesthetic formulation for postoperative pain management. Drug release testing, oil-binding capacity, injection forces, x-ray diffraction, differential scanning calorimetry, and rheological testing were serially performed to characterize the functional properties of each oleogel. After benchtop assessment, the superior bupivacaine-loaded oleogel formulation was compared to bupivacaine HCl, liposomal bupivacaine, and bupivacaine-loaded medium-chain triglyceride oil in a rat sciatic nerve block model to assess in vivo long-acting local anesthetic performance. In vitro drug release kinetics were similar for all formulations, indicating that drug release rate is primarily dependent on the drug's affinity to the base oil. Glyceryl monostearate-based formulations had superior shelf-life and thermal stability. The glyceryl monostearate oleogel formulation was selected for in vivo evaluation. It was found to have a significantly longer duration of anesthetic effect than liposomal bupivacaine and was able to provide anesthesia twice as long as the equipotent bupivacaine-loaded medium-chain triglyceride oil, indicating that the increased viscosity of the oleogel provided enhanced controlled release over the drug-loaded oil alone.


Asunto(s)
Anestésicos Locales , Bupivacaína , Ratas , Animales , Glicéridos/química , Triglicéridos
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