Topical drug delivery: History, percutaneous absorption, and product development
Autor: | Yousuf H. Mohammed, Azadeh Alinaghi, Amy Holmes, John van der Hoek, Hanumanth Srikanth Cheruvu, Heather A. E. Benson, Michael Pastore, Sean E. Mangion, Michael S. Roberts, Jeffrey E. Grice |
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Přispěvatelé: | Roberts, Michael S, Cheruvu, Hanumanth S, Mangion, Sean E, Alinaghi, Azadeh, Benson, Heather AE, Mohammed, Yousuf, Holmes, Amy, van der Hoek, John, Pastore, Michael, Grice, Jeffrey E |
Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
PBPK
Physiologically based pharmacokinetic modelling Administration Topical Skin Absorption topical drug delivery Population mechanism Pharmaceutical Science clearance consumer behavior Computational biology Models Biological 030226 pharmacology & pharmacy IVPT 030207 dermatology & venereal diseases 03 medical and health sciences Drug Delivery Systems 0302 clinical medicine Drug Development finite dose Pharmacokinetics QSPR Animals Humans product development education History Ancient History 15th Century Skin Drug transport bioequivalence education.field_of_study Topical drug integumentary system Product design business.industry Chemistry skin and its appendages History 19th Century History 20th Century History Medieval 3. Good health percutaneous absorption History 16th Century Percutaneous absorption New product development history heterogeneity business |
Zdroj: | Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews. 177:113929 |
ISSN: | 0169-409X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.addr.2021.113929 |
Popis: | Refereed/Peer-reviewed Topical products, widely used to manage skin conditions, have evolved from simple potions to sophisticated delivery systems. Their development has been facilitated by advances in percutaneous absorption and product design based on an increasingly mechanistic understanding of drug-product-skin interactions, associated experiments, and a quality-by-design framework. Topical drug delivery involves drug transport from a product on the skin to a local target site and then clearance by diffusion, metabolism, and the dermal circulation to the rest of the body and deeper tissues. Insights have been provided by Quantitative Structure Permeability Relationships (QSPR), molecular dynamics simulations, and dermal Physiologically Based PharmacoKinetics (PBPK). Currently, generic product equivalents of reference-listed products dominate the topical delivery market. There is an increasing regulatory interest in understanding topical product delivery behavior under ‘in use’ conditions and predicting in vivo response for population variations in skin barrier function and response using in silico and in vitro findings. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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