RESUMO
Alternative formulations of entecavir, a once daily oral hepatitis B antiretroviral, may improve treatment adherence by patients. We explored the use of biocompatible polymers to control entecavir dissolution in two formats suitable for subcutaneous implantation. Hot melt extrudates were prepared by extruding entecavir-polymer blends at specified weight ratios. Dip-coated tablets were prepared by compressing entecavir in a multi-tip tooling. Tablets were dip-coated in solutions of polymer and dried. In rodents, entecavir-poly(caprolactone) extrudates demonstrated >180â¯days of continuous drug release, although below the estimated efficacious target input rate. Drug pharmacokinetic profiles were tunable by varying the polymer employed and implant format. The rank order trends of drug input rates observed in vitro were observed in vivo in the detected plasma concentrations of entecavir. In all dose groups entecavir was not tolerated locally at the site of administration where adverse event severity correlated with drug input rate. These polymer-based implantable formats have applicability to long-acting formulations of high solubility compounds beyond entecavir.