Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Spray-Dried, Nanoencapsulated, Multi-Drug Anti-Tuberculosis Therapy Aimed at Once Weekly Administration for the Duration of Treatment

2019; Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute; Volume: 9; Issue: 8 Linguagem: Inglês

10.3390/nano9081167

ISSN

2079-4991

Autores

Lonji Kalombo, Yolandy Lemmer, Boitumelo Semete‐Makokotlela, Bathabile Ramalapa, Patric Nkuna, Laetitia L.L.I.J. Booysen, Saloshnee Naidoo, Rose Hayeshi, J.A. Verschoor, Hulda Swai,

Tópico(s)

Drug Solubulity and Delivery Systems

Resumo

Aiming to improve the treatment outcomes of current daily tuberculosis (TB) chemotherapy over several months, we investigated whether nanoencapsulation of existing drugs would allow decreasing the treatment frequency to weekly, thereby ultimately improving patient compliance. Nanoencapsulation of three first-line anti-TB drugs was achieved by a unique, scalable spray-drying technology forming free-flowing powders in the nanometer range with encapsulation efficiencies of 82, 75, and 62% respectively for rifampicin, pyrazinamide, and isoniazid. In a pre-clinical study on TB infected mice, we demonstrate that the encapsulated drugs, administered once weekly for nine weeks, showed comparable efficacy to daily treatment with free drugs over the same experimental period. Both treatment approaches had equivalent outcomes for resolution of inflammation associated with the infection of lungs and spleens. These results demonstrate how scalable technology could be used to manufacture nanoencapsulated drugs. The formulations may be used to reduce the oral dose frequency from daily to once weekly in order to treat uncomplicated TB.

Referência(s)