RESUMO
The primary drying is the longest step of the freeze-drying process and becomes one of the focuses for lyophilization cycle development inevitably, which is often approaching through a "trial and error" course and requires a labor-intensive and time-consuming endeavor. Nevertheless, drawing support from characterization techniques to understand the physic-chemical properties changing of the sample during lyophilization and their correlation with process conditions comprehensively, the freeze-drying development and optimization will get more from less. To get the optimal lyophilization cycle in the least time, the instrumental methods assisting primary drying design are summarized. The techniques used for estimating the collapse temperature of products are reviewed at first, aiming to provide a reference on the primary drying temperature setting to guarantee product quality. The instrumental methods for primary drying end prediction are also discussed to get optimal freeze-drying protocol with higher productivity. This review highlights the practicality of the above techniques through expounding basic principles, typical measurement conditions, merits and drawbacks, interpretation of results and practical applications, etc. At last, the techniques used for residual moisture detection of lyophilized products and size determination after liposome rehydration are briefly introduced.
Assuntos
Dessecação , Lipossomos , Liofilização , TemperaturaRESUMO
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) shows a promising synergy with chemotherapy in the therapeutic outcome of malignant cancers. The minimal invasiveness and nonsystemic toxicity are appealing advantages of PDT, but combination with chemotherapy brings in the nonselective toxicity. We designed a polymeric nanoparticle system that contains both a chemotherapeutic agent and a photosensitizer to seek improvement for chemo-photodynamic therapy. First, to address the challenge of efficient co-delivery, polymer-conjugated doxorubicin (PEG-PBC-TKDOX) was synthesized to load photosensitizer chlorin e6 (Ce6). Ce6 is retained with DOX by a π-π stacking interaction, with high loading (41.9 wt %) and the optimal nanoparticle size (50 nm). Second, light given in PDT treatment not only excites Ce6 to produce cytotoxic reactive oxygen species (ROS) but also spatiotemporally activates a cascade reaction to release the loaded drugs. Finally, we report a self-destructive polymeric carrier (PEG-PBC-TKDOX) that depolymerizes its backbone to facilitate drug release upon ROS stimulus. This is achieved by grafting the ROS-sensitive pendant thioketal to aliphatic polycarbonate. When DOX is covalently modified to this polymer via thioketal, target specificity is controlled by light, and off-target delivery toxicity is mostly avoided. An oral squamous cell carcinoma that is clinically relevant to PDT was used as the cancer model. We put forward a polymeric system with improved efficiency for chemo-photodynamic therapy and reduced off-target toxicity.