Development and in-vitro characterization of nanoemulsions loaded with paclitaxel/ γ-tocotrienol lipid conjugates

Publication date: 30 January 2018 Source:International Journal of Pharmaceutics, Volume 536, Issue 1 Author(s): Ahmed Abu-Fayyad, Mohammad M. Kamal, Jennifer L. Carroll, Ana-Maria Dragoi, Robert Cody, James Cardelli, Sami Nazzal Vitamin E TPGS is a tocopherol (α-T) based nonionic surfactant that was used in the formulation of the Tocosol™ paclitaxel nanoemulsion, which was withdrawn from phase III clinical trials. Unlike tocopherols, however, the tocotrienol (T3) isomers of vitamin E were found to have innate anticancer activity and were shown to potentiate the antitumor activity of paclitaxel. The primary objective of the present study was therefore to develop a paclitaxel nanoemulsions by substituting α-T oil core of Tocosol™ with γ-T3 in, and vitamin E TPGS with PEGylated γ-T3 as the shell, and test the nanoemulsions against Bx-PC-3 and PANC-1 pancreatic tumor cells. A secondary objective was to test the activity of paclitaxel when directly conjugated with the γ-T3 isomer of vitamin E. The synthesis of the conjugates was confirmed by NMR and mass spectroscopy. Developed nanoemulsions were loaded with free or lipid conjugated paclitaxel. Nanoemulsions droplets were <300 nm with fastest release observed with formulations loaded with free paclitaxel when γ-T3 was used as the core. Substituting α-T with γ-T3 was also found to potentiate the anticancer activity of the nanoemulsions. Although marginal increase in activity was observed when nanoemuls...
Source: International Journal of Pharmaceutics - Category: Drugs & Pharmacology Source Type: research