Oral delivery of biologics using drug-device combinations

[Display omitted] •The anatomy and physiology of the gastrointestinal tract defines boundary conditions for orally administered devices.•Device dimensions are related to intestinal obstruction rates and can complicate safe daily dosing.•Low protein solubility can hamper encapsulation of biologics in...

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Published inCurrent opinion in pharmacology Vol. 36; pp. 8 - 13
Main Authors Caffarel-Salvador, Ester, Abramson, Alex, Langer, Robert, Traverso, Giovanni
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Elsevier Ltd 01.10.2017
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Summary:[Display omitted] •The anatomy and physiology of the gastrointestinal tract defines boundary conditions for orally administered devices.•Device dimensions are related to intestinal obstruction rates and can complicate safe daily dosing.•Low protein solubility can hamper encapsulation of biologics in a liquid formulation.•Oral devices could increase bioavailability by localizing to the tissue and increasing permeability. Orally administered devices could enable the systemic uptake of biologic therapeutics by engineering around the physiological barriers present in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. Such devices aim to shield cargo from degradative enzymes and increase the diffusion rate of medication through the GI mucosa. In order to achieve clinical relevance, these designs must significantly increase systemic drug bioavailability, deliver a clinically relevant dose and remain safe when taken frequently. Such an achievement stands to reduce our dependence on needle injections, potentially increasing patient adherence and reducing needle-associated complications. Here we discuss the physical and chemical constraints imposed by the GI organs and use these to develop a set of boundary conditions on oral device designs for the delivery of macromolecules. We critically examine how device size affects the rate of intestinal obstruction and hinders the loading capacity of poorly soluble protein drugs. We then discuss how current orally administered devices could solve the problem of tissue permeation and conclude that these physical methods stand to provide an efficacious set of alternatives to the classic hypodermic needle.
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Co-First authors
ISSN:1471-4892
1471-4973
DOI:10.1016/j.coph.2017.07.003