Kolliphor surfactants affect solubilization and bioavailability of fenofibrate. Studies of in vitro digestion and absorption in rats.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Standard

Kolliphor surfactants affect solubilization and bioavailability of fenofibrate. Studies of in vitro digestion and absorption in rats. / Berthelsen, Ragna; Holm, Rene; Jacobsen, Jette; Kristensen, Jakob; Abrahamsson, Bertil; Müllertz, Anette.

In: Molecular Pharmaceutics, Vol. 12, No. 4, 06.04.2015, p. 1062-1071.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Berthelsen, R, Holm, R, Jacobsen, J, Kristensen, J, Abrahamsson, B & Müllertz, A 2015, 'Kolliphor surfactants affect solubilization and bioavailability of fenofibrate. Studies of in vitro digestion and absorption in rats.', Molecular Pharmaceutics, vol. 12, no. 4, pp. 1062-1071. <https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/mp500545k>

APA

Berthelsen, R., Holm, R., Jacobsen, J., Kristensen, J., Abrahamsson, B., & Müllertz, A. (2015). Kolliphor surfactants affect solubilization and bioavailability of fenofibrate. Studies of in vitro digestion and absorption in rats. Molecular Pharmaceutics, 12(4), 1062-1071. https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/mp500545k

Vancouver

Berthelsen R, Holm R, Jacobsen J, Kristensen J, Abrahamsson B, Müllertz A. Kolliphor surfactants affect solubilization and bioavailability of fenofibrate. Studies of in vitro digestion and absorption in rats. Molecular Pharmaceutics. 2015 Apr 6;12(4):1062-1071.

Author

Berthelsen, Ragna ; Holm, Rene ; Jacobsen, Jette ; Kristensen, Jakob ; Abrahamsson, Bertil ; Müllertz, Anette. / Kolliphor surfactants affect solubilization and bioavailability of fenofibrate. Studies of in vitro digestion and absorption in rats. In: Molecular Pharmaceutics. 2015 ; Vol. 12, No. 4. pp. 1062-1071.

Bibtex

@article{d02893fcc1504f2f88e04f0cfe4f242c,
title = "Kolliphor surfactants affect solubilization and bioavailability of fenofibrate. Studies of in vitro digestion and absorption in rats.",
abstract = "Selection of excipients for drug formulations requires both intellectual and experimental considerations as many of the used excipients are affected by physiological factors, e.g., they may be digested by pancreatic enzymes in the gastrointestinal tract. In the present paper we have looked systematically into the differences between Kolliphor ELP, EL, and RH40 and how they affect the bioavailability of fenofibrate, through pharmacokinetic studies in rats and in vitro lipolysis studies. The study design was made as simple as possible to avoid confounding factors, for which reason the tested formulations only comprised an aqueous micellar solution of the model drug (fenofibrate) in varying concentrations (2–25% (w/v)) of the three tested surfactants. Increased concentrations of Kolliphor ELP and EL led to increased fenofibrate AUC0–24h values. For the Kolliphor RH40 formulations, an apparent fenofibrate absorption optimum was seen at 15% (w/v) surfactant, displaying both the highest AUC0–24h and Cmax. The reduced absorption of fenofibrate from the formulation containing the highest level of surfactant (25% w/v) was thought to be caused by some degree of trapping within Kolliphor RH40 micelles. In vitro, Kolliphor ELP and EL were found to be more prone to digestion than Kolliphor RH40, though not affecting the in vivo results. The highest fenofibrate bioavailability was attained from formulations with high Kolliphor ELP/EL levels (25% (w/v)), indicating that these surfactants are the better choice for solubilizing fenofibrate in order to increase the absorption upon oral administration. Due to drug dependent effects of the different types of Kolliphor, more studies are recommended in order to understand which type of Kolliphor is best suited for a given drug.",
keywords = "Former Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Bioavailability, Fenofibrate, In vitro lipolysis, micellar trapping, Rats, surfactant",
author = "Ragna Berthelsen and Rene Holm and Jette Jacobsen and Jakob Kristensen and Bertil Abrahamsson and Anette M{\"u}llertz",
year = "2015",
month = apr,
day = "6",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "1062--1071",
journal = "Molecular Pharmaceutics",
issn = "1543-8384",
publisher = "American Chemical Society",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Kolliphor surfactants affect solubilization and bioavailability of fenofibrate. Studies of in vitro digestion and absorption in rats.

AU - Berthelsen, Ragna

AU - Holm, Rene

AU - Jacobsen, Jette

AU - Kristensen, Jakob

AU - Abrahamsson, Bertil

AU - Müllertz, Anette

PY - 2015/4/6

Y1 - 2015/4/6

N2 - Selection of excipients for drug formulations requires both intellectual and experimental considerations as many of the used excipients are affected by physiological factors, e.g., they may be digested by pancreatic enzymes in the gastrointestinal tract. In the present paper we have looked systematically into the differences between Kolliphor ELP, EL, and RH40 and how they affect the bioavailability of fenofibrate, through pharmacokinetic studies in rats and in vitro lipolysis studies. The study design was made as simple as possible to avoid confounding factors, for which reason the tested formulations only comprised an aqueous micellar solution of the model drug (fenofibrate) in varying concentrations (2–25% (w/v)) of the three tested surfactants. Increased concentrations of Kolliphor ELP and EL led to increased fenofibrate AUC0–24h values. For the Kolliphor RH40 formulations, an apparent fenofibrate absorption optimum was seen at 15% (w/v) surfactant, displaying both the highest AUC0–24h and Cmax. The reduced absorption of fenofibrate from the formulation containing the highest level of surfactant (25% w/v) was thought to be caused by some degree of trapping within Kolliphor RH40 micelles. In vitro, Kolliphor ELP and EL were found to be more prone to digestion than Kolliphor RH40, though not affecting the in vivo results. The highest fenofibrate bioavailability was attained from formulations with high Kolliphor ELP/EL levels (25% (w/v)), indicating that these surfactants are the better choice for solubilizing fenofibrate in order to increase the absorption upon oral administration. Due to drug dependent effects of the different types of Kolliphor, more studies are recommended in order to understand which type of Kolliphor is best suited for a given drug.

AB - Selection of excipients for drug formulations requires both intellectual and experimental considerations as many of the used excipients are affected by physiological factors, e.g., they may be digested by pancreatic enzymes in the gastrointestinal tract. In the present paper we have looked systematically into the differences between Kolliphor ELP, EL, and RH40 and how they affect the bioavailability of fenofibrate, through pharmacokinetic studies in rats and in vitro lipolysis studies. The study design was made as simple as possible to avoid confounding factors, for which reason the tested formulations only comprised an aqueous micellar solution of the model drug (fenofibrate) in varying concentrations (2–25% (w/v)) of the three tested surfactants. Increased concentrations of Kolliphor ELP and EL led to increased fenofibrate AUC0–24h values. For the Kolliphor RH40 formulations, an apparent fenofibrate absorption optimum was seen at 15% (w/v) surfactant, displaying both the highest AUC0–24h and Cmax. The reduced absorption of fenofibrate from the formulation containing the highest level of surfactant (25% w/v) was thought to be caused by some degree of trapping within Kolliphor RH40 micelles. In vitro, Kolliphor ELP and EL were found to be more prone to digestion than Kolliphor RH40, though not affecting the in vivo results. The highest fenofibrate bioavailability was attained from formulations with high Kolliphor ELP/EL levels (25% (w/v)), indicating that these surfactants are the better choice for solubilizing fenofibrate in order to increase the absorption upon oral administration. Due to drug dependent effects of the different types of Kolliphor, more studies are recommended in order to understand which type of Kolliphor is best suited for a given drug.

KW - Former Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences

KW - Bioavailability

KW - Fenofibrate

KW - In vitro lipolysis

KW - micellar trapping

KW - Rats

KW - surfactant

M3 - Journal article

VL - 12

SP - 1062

EP - 1071

JO - Molecular Pharmaceutics

JF - Molecular Pharmaceutics

SN - 1543-8384

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 137508922