VEDANT Chaudhari
VEDANT Chaudhari
VEDANT Chaudhari
BACHELOR OF PHARMACY
Submitted By-
CHAUDHARI VEDANT ARVIND
(Final Year B.Pharm.)
University Seat No.-
515831
I am highly thankful to Dr. Parag R. Patil, Principal, KYDSCT’s college of Pharmacy, Sakegaon
(Bhusawal) who continuous help and providing valuable suggestion for completing this project.
With a feeling of profound pleasure, I gratefully own my sincere thanks to academic guide, Prof.
Mr. Amit. R. Jadhav with Department of Pharmaceutical Quality Assurance , KYDSCT’s college of
pharmacy, Sakegaon (Bhusawal) for Providing all the facilities and encouragement in completing
my project work.
I am very thankful to staff members of KYDSCT’s college of pharmacy, Sakegaon (Bhusawal), who
are great support and very helpful to me throughout my entire project.
Last, but not the least, I express my gratitude and apologize to anybody who contribution, I could
not mention in this page.
2. Introduction 2-3
3. Objectives 3
12. Conclusion 25
Abstract:-
The knowledge of a drug's pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic behavior has recently made
the creation of the ideal drug delivery system more logical. It is now evident that
interdisciplinary efforts will play a major role in the success of drug delivery research in the
future. These carriers, known as new drug delivery systems (NDDS), keep the drug
concentration within the therapeutic range for extended periods of time. With the help of
transdermal drug delivery systems (TDDS), it is possible to maintain medication release while
lowering the dosage and, consequently, the adverse effects of oral therapy. Transdermal
medications come in a discreet, self-contained dose form. It introduces a medication into the
systemic circulation at a regulated pace through unbroken skin. Delivery speed is managed.
The skin or membrane in the delivery system regulates the rate of distribution. It is a
challenging to create drug delivery system that is sophisticated and intricate. It needs certain
manufacturing tools and processes.
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Introduction:-
A novel drug delivery system is one that takes advantage of recent developments in
the knowledge of the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic behavior of the drug to provide
a more logical method for creating the best possible drug delivery system. The carriers used in
innovative drug delivery systems (NDDS) help keep medication concentrations in therapeutic
ranges for extended periods of time. Innovative drug delivery methods have a number of
benefits over traditional drug delivery methods. There exist A variety of drug delivery methods
have been created, and some are currently being developed, with the intention of reducing
medication loss, avoiding negative side effects, increasing drug bioavailability, and
encouraging and facilitating the drug's accumulation in the necessary bio-zone (site).
The last several years have seen a resurgence of interest in the creation of innovative
drug delivery methods for already-approved pharmaceutical compounds. The creation of a
novel delivery method for already-approved medication molecules enhances the drug's
performance in terms of safety and efficacy as well as patient compliance and total therapeutic
benefit. Transdermal Drug Delivery Systems, or "patches," are self-contained, discrete dosage
forms that, when placed to undamaged skin, transfer drugs to the systemic circulation at a
controlled rate through the skin. TDDS dose forms are intended to spread a therapeutically
effective dosage of medication throughout the skin of a patient.
This is so because the goal of oral treatment is to achieve and sustain a drug
concentration in the body that is within the range that is therapeutically effective. This is
accomplished by administering a fixed dose at regular intervals, which causes the body's drug
concentration to follow a peak and trough profile and increases the risk of side effects or
therapeutic failure. A significant amount of drug is lost in the region around the target organ,
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so therapy needs to be closely watched to prevent overdosing. When applied to the skin,
medicated adhesive patches distribute a therapeutically effective dosage of medication
throughout the skin.
In 1981, the first transdermal patch was authorized to treat nausea, vomiting, and
motion sickness. The market for transdermal drug delivery. This has made it possible to create
active patches that deliver proteins, vaccines, and medications for pain management. Smaller
patches with improved adhesion are being produced by passive patch technology. Transdermal
drug delivery systems (TDDS) have made a name for themselves as essential components of
cutting-edge drug delivery systems.
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Objective:-
Advantages:-
1. It is appropriate for drug candidates with short half lives and low therapeutic indices.
Disadvantages:-
1. Drugs that cause skin irritation or sensitization should not be administered transdermally.
2. The impermeability of the skin naturally limits the amount of drugs that can be delivered
transdermally, so only relatively potent medications are appropriate.
3. Technical difficulties with the adhesion of system to different skin type and under various
environmental conditions.
4. A lot of medications, particularly those with hydrophilic structures, penetrate the skin too
slowly to be useful for therapeutic purposes.
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Reviewing the structural and biochemical aspects of human skin, as well as those traits that
affect the barrier function and the rate at which drugs enter the body through the skin, is crucial
for comprehending the idea of TDDS.
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A drug molecule can cross the intact stratum corneum in three crucial ways: through the skin's
appendages (shunt routes); through the intercellular spaces between the stratum
lucilipiddomains and other layers of the epidermis; or through a transcellular pathway. A given
drug is likely to permeate through a combination of these pathways, with the physicochemical
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properties of the molecule determining the relative contributions of these pathways to the gross
flux.
A continuous passageway directly through the stratum corneum barrier is provided by skin
appendages. Nevertheless, a number of factors make their impact on drug penetration less
effective. The area available for direct contact of the applied drug formulation is limited due to
the small surface area occupied by sweat ducts and hair follicles, which typically make up 0.1%
of the skin's surface area.
Transcellular Route:
Medication that enters the skin through the transcellular pathway passes through corneocytes.
Hydrophilic medications can pass through the aqueous environment that corneocytes, which
are composed primarily of hydrated keratin, provide. A drug's transcellular diffusion pathway
necessitates several partitioning and diffusion steps.
Intercellular Route:
The drug diffuses through the continuous lipid matrix as part of the intercellular pathway. There
are two main reasons this route is a significant challenge. The interdigitating nature of the
corneocytes produces a convoluted pathway for intercellular drug permeation, which contrasts
with the relatively direct path of the transcellular route, reinforcing the "bricks and mortar"
model of the stratum corneum. The domain separating cells is made up of bilayers with
alternating structures. As such, a medication needs to repeatedly diffuse through lipid and
aqueous domains and partition into them one after the other. It is widely acknowledged that
this pathway accounts for the majority of small, uncharged molecules that enter the skin.
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Three factors can be taken into consideration when formulating an effective transdermal drug
delivery system: the drug, the skin, and the vehicles. Thus, biological and physicochemical
factors can be used to categorize the influencing factors.
Biological Factors:
Skin Conditions:
Although the intact skin serves as a barrier, numerous substances such as acids and alkali can
pass through the skin's barrier cells and open the intricate, dense horny layer structure. Lipid
fraction is removed by solvents like methanol and chloroform, creating artificial shunts that
allow drug molecules to move freely through.
Skin Age:
Younger skin is more porous than older skin. Children are more vulnerable to toxins absorbing
through their skin. Compared to mature adult skin, the skin of fetuses and infants is more
permeable. As a result, children absorb topical steroids through the skin more quickly than
adults do, but both groups absorb water equally. Age of the skin is therefore one of the variables
influencing drug penetration in TDDS.
Blood Supply:
Site-specific differences include skin thickness, stratum corneum type, and appendage density.
These elements have a big impact on penetration.
Skin Metabolism:
Chemokines, hormones, steroids, and certain medications are all metabolized by the skin.
Therefore, the effectiveness of a drug absorbed through the skin is determined by skin
metabolism.
Species Difference:
Anatomical variations in the skin of different mammalian species include variations in the SC's
thickness, the quantity of sweat glands, and the density of hair follicles per unit surface area.
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The thickness, density, and keratinization of skin differ among species, which influences the
penetration.
Physiochemical Factors:
Skin Hydration:
Skin becomes much more permeable when it comes into contact with water. The most crucial
element boosting skin penetration is hydration. Humectants are therefore used in transdermal
delivery.
Drug penetration increases tenfold as temperature changes. With a drop in temperature, the
diffusion coefficient falls. The dissociation of weak bases and acids is contingent upon the pH
and pKa or pKb values. The amount of unionized drug in the skin determines the drug
concentration. As a result, two critical variables influencing drug penetration are pH and
temperature.
Diffusion coefficient:
Drug penetration is based on the drug's diffusion coefficient. The properties of the drug, the
diffusion medium, and their interactions all affect the drug's diffusion coefficient at constant
temperature.
Drug Concentration:
The gradient of concentration across the barrier determines the flux, and a higher concentration
gradient indicates a higher drug concentration across the barrier.
Partition Coefficient:
The drug is soluble in both lipids and water. Good action necessitates the ideal K partition
coefficient. Medication with a high K content isn't ready to leave the skin's lipid layer. Drugs
with low K content won't permeate either.
Molecular Size and Shape:
Transdermal flux is inversely correlated with the drug's molecular size. For transdermal
delivery, a drug molecule's ideal size and shape are less than 400.
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This TDDS combines matrix-dispersion and reservoir systems. The drug is suspended in an
aqueous solution of a water-soluble polymer to prepare the drug reservoir in this system. The
drug-soluble solution is then uniformly dispersed in a lipophilic polymer to form multiple
imperceptible, microscopic spheres of drug reservoirs. By instantly cross-linking the polymer,
the thermodynamically unstable dispersion is stabilized.
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❖ Composition of TDDS: -
1. Polymer matrix.
2. Drug.
3. Permeation enhancers.
4. Pressure sensitive adhesives (PSAs).
5. Backing membrane.
6. Release liner.
7. Other Excipients.
Natural Polymers:-
Artificial Polymers:-
2. Drug:-
The medication that is incorporated into a TDDS must be carefully chosen. The following
categories of drug parameters make up the perfect drug candidate for TDDS:
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Physical-Chemical Characteristics:
Biological Properties:
• The medication should have a high potency, requiring a daily dosage of a few
milligrammes or less.
• The medication's half-life ought to be brief.
• The medication ought to be nonallergic and nonirritating.
• The drug shouldn't become permanently bonded in the subcutaneous tissue; instead, it
should be incorporated into TDDS if it breaks down in the GIT or is rendered inactive
by hepatic first-pass metabolism.
3) Permeation Enhancers:
Chemical permeation enhancers:
By introducing amphiphilic molecules or extracting lipids, they disturb the stratum corneum's
highly ordered intercellular lipid bilayers, reversibly lowering the barrier resistance and
permitting better drug penetration when administered in conjunction. The perfect enhancer
would be inert, non-toxic, non-allergic, non-irritating, function unidirectionally, and get along
with the medications and excipients. Their effectiveness seems to depend on the drug, the skin,
and the concentration.
The most popular permeation enhancer is ethanol; other examples include essential oils or
terpenes (cineole, carveol, menthone, citral, menthol, d-limonene); dimethyl sulfoxide;
propylene glycol; N-methyl-2-pyrrolidine; ethyl pyrrolidine; polyethylene glycol 400;
isopropyl myristate; myristic acid; succinic acid; laurocapram (azone); methyl laureate; lauric
acid; sodium lauryl sulphate; non-ionic surfactant (spans, tweens); pluronic; oleic acid;
diethylene glycol monomethyl ether; urea, etc.
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Figure: Hydrophilic and lipophilic pathways of drug penetration and action mode of
penetration enhancers.
Enhancers of Physical Permeation:
It has been reported that protransferosome gel, niosomes, ethanolic liposomes, and prodrug
approach increase permeability by increasing drug solubilization and partitioning into the skin.
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These are substances that, when removed with little force, leave no trace of their attachment to
a substrate (skin in TDDS). Only when these materials are in close proximity to one another
do interatomic and intermolecular attractive forces form at the interface. If the material is
pressure-sensitive, meaning it deforms under light pressure, then this degree of contact can be
achieved. Because adhesives involve a liquid-like flow, they cause the skin's surface to become
wet when pressure is applied, and they solidify in that state when pressure is released. PSAs in
the commercial domain comprise silicones, polyacrylate, and polyisobutylene. The backing
membrane is responsible for giving TDDS its appearance, flexibility, and occlusion properties.
For this reason, when designing a backing layer, the material's chemical resistance should be
taken into serious consideration. It is important to take into account the compatibility of the
excipients with the backing layer because extended contact between the two can lead to
leaching of the excipients from the layer or diffusion of the excipients, drug, or penetration
enhancer through the layer.
The backing with the highest moisture vapour transmission rate, the best oxygen transmission,
and the lowest modulus or highest flexibility is the most appropriate. For systems that contain
medication in a liquid or gel, the backing material needs to be heat-sealable in order to enable
form-fill-seal, or fluid-tight, packaging of the drug reservoir. The backing with the lowest
modulus or highest flexibility, good oxygen transmission, and high moisture vapour
transmission rate will be the most comfortable. Examples of backing materials are films made
of vinyl, polyethylene, polyester, aluminium, and polyolef. Some types of backing materials
include vinyl, polyester films, polyester-polypropylene films, Co Tran 9722 film,
polypropylene resin, polyethylene resin, polyurethylene, and ethylene-vinyl acetate.
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6) Release Liner:
For the duration of its storage, the transdermal patch is shielded by a protective liner. The liner
is taken off and thrown away before the patch is applied to the skin. Since the liner and
transdermal patch are in close contact, it should be chemically inert. A release liner is composed
of an occlusive base layer (such as polyethylene or polyvinyl chloride) or a non-occlusive base
layer (such as paper fabric) and a silicon or Teflon release coating layer. For TDDS release
liners, metalized laminates and polyester foil are also utilised.
7) Additional Excipients:
To prepare the drug reservoir, a variety of solvents are used either singly or in combination,
including water, ethanol, isopropyl myristate, isopropyl alcohol, and dichloromethane. In
addition to the permeation enhancer, co-solvents such as ethanol and propylene glycol are
employed. The trans-dermal patch gains its plasticity from plasticizers such as diethyl
phthalate, dibutyl phthalate, glycerol, triethyl citrate, polyethylene glycol 400, EudraLex, and
propylene glycol.
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1. Physicochemical evaluation:
Interaction Studies:
Patch Thickness:
Weight Uniformity:
The prepared patches are dried at 60°C for four hours prior to the test. A designated patch area
is divided into several sections and weighed using a digital balance. The individual weights are
used to compute the average weight and standard deviation values.
Folding Endurance:
From the prepared patches, a strip of a specific area is cut and folded over and over until it
breaks. The folding endurance value is indicated by the number of times the film has been
folded at the same location without breaking.
The percentage moisture content of the prepared films should be measured individually and
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then stored at room temperature for 24 hours in a desiccator filled with fused calcium chloride.
The films must be reweighed after a 24-hour period in order to calculate the moisture content
percentage using the formula below. Percentage moisture content = [Initial weight- Final
weight/ Final weight] ×100.
Percentage Moisture Uptake:
To maintain 84% RH, the weighed films must be kept in a desiccator with a saturated
potassium chloride solution for 24 hours at room temperature. The films must be reweighed
after 24 hours in order to calculate the percentage of moisture uptake using the formula below.
Percentage moisture uptake = [Final weight- Initial weight/ initial weight] ×100.
Formula: WVP=W/A
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Peel adhesion is the force needed to remove an adhesive coating from a test substrate. The
molecular weight of the adhesive polymer as well as the kind and quantity of additives added
can be used to determine the peel adhesion properties. In this test, a backing membrane of
choice or a stainless steel plate are covered with a single piece of tape. After that, the tape is
pulled away from the substrate at a 180-degree angle, and the force needed to do so is
calculated.
Flatness test:-
Three longitudinal strips—one from the centre, one from the left side, and one from the right
side—are cut from each film at different points for this test. Every strip's length is measured,
and the percent constriction—0% constriction being equal to 100% flatness—is used to
calculate the variation in length caused by non-uniformity in flatness.
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2. In vitro evaluation:
In vitro release studies:
The donor and receptor compartments of a Franz diffusion cell can be used to assess transdermal
patches in vitro. The receptor compartment has an effective surface area of 1–5 cm2 and a volume
of 5–12 ml. A magnetic bar continuously stirs the diffusion buffer at 600 rpm. A water jacket
enclosing the receptor compartment allows thermostated water to circulate, maintaining the
temperature in the majority of the solution. A suitable method is used to analyse the drug content,
and sink condition must be maintained.
In vitro Skin Permeation Studies:
To conduct this test, diffusion cells are used. An electric clipper is used to remove hair from the
abdominal region of male Wistar rats weighing 200-250g. After thoroughly cleaning the dermal
side of the skin with distilled water to get rid of any blood vessels or adhering tissues, the skin is
equilibrated in phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) or dissolution medium for an hour. It is then put on a
magnetic stirrer with a tiny magnetic needle to ensure that the diffusant is distributed evenly.
3. In vivo Evaluation:
Transdermal patches can be assessed in vivo in relation to The most accurate representation of
a drug's performance comes from in vivo tests. In vivo studies allow for the full exploration of
variables that are not possible to account for in vitro studies. Human volunteers or animal
models can be used to evaluate TDDS in vivo.
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As long as design advancements are made, transdermal analgesic delivery is expected to gain
more and more traction. Studies are being conducted to improve efficacy and safety. To
enhance practical aspects such as the patch wearer's experience and to offer more accurate drug
delivery linked to longer duration of action. Other possible advancements include enhanced
transdermal technology, which raises the energy of the drug molecules or modifies the skin
barrier to increase drug flux through the skin by using mechanical energy. Many "active"
transdermal technologies are being researched for a variety of medications following the
successful design of patches utilising iontophoresis.
The three methods are as follows: sonophoresis, which uses low frequency ultrasonic energy
to break the stratum corneum, electroporation, which uses brief, high-voltage electrical pulses
to create temporary aqueous pores in the skin, and thermal energy. Drug flux across the skin
has been studied in relation to magnetic energy, or magnetophoresis. The safest, easiest, and
substitute method for systemic drug delivery is the transdermal drug delivery system (TDDS).
Systemic drug delivery via skin has a number of benefits, including maintaining a steady drug
level in blood plasma, fewer adverse effects, enhancing bioavailability by avoiding hepatic first
pass metabolism, and boosting patient adherence to treatment regimen. Skin is now thought to
be the safest route for administering drugs because it allows for continuous drug release into
the bloodstream.
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CONCLUSION:
Scientists with high achievement rates are widely utilising their potential for controlled release.
Transdermal delivery is an incredibly successful mode of administration for drugs with the
proper combination of pharmacology and physical chemistry. Drug reservoirs, liners,
adherents, permeation enhancers, backing laminates, plasticizers, and solvents are some of the
fundamental parts of a transdermal patch that are essential to the drug's skin release.
Transdermal patches come in a variety of forms, including matrix, reservoir, membrane matrix
hybrid, micro reservoir type, and drug-containing adhesive type. These patches are prepared
using various techniques using the fundamental TDDS components. Following their
preparation, transdermal patches are assessed for stability, physicochemical, in vitro
permeation, animal, human, and skin irritation investigation. Future TDDS developments are
probably going to concentrate on expanding the range of drugs that are available for use and
giving more control over therapy regimens.
To ensure that the requirements of science, regulations, and consumers are satisfied, both
subjective and objective analysis of these devices is necessary. Comparing the devices under
development to traditional transdermal patch therapies, they are more expensive and intricate.
Furthermore, the device's effects on the skin must be reversible because any long-term harm to
the SC would cause it to lose its barrier qualities and, consequently, its ability to function as a
protective organ. Data supporting the device's safety when worn on the skin for either short- or
long-term use will also be needed for regulatory bodies. Therefore, it is necessary to address
the novel drug delivery technologies' safety, efficacy, portability, user-friendliness, cost-
effectiveness, and potential market if they are to succeed and rival those that are currently
available on the market.
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