Abstract

While each route of therapeutic drug delivery has its own advantages and limitations, oral delivery is often favored because it offers convenient painless administration, sustained delivery, prolonged shelf life, and often lower manufacturing cost. Its limitations include mucus and epithelial cell barriers in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract that can block access of larger molecules including Therapeutic protein or peptide-based drugs (TPPs), resulting in reduced bioavailability. This review describes these barriers and discusses different strategies used to modify TPPs to enhance their oral bioavailability and/or to increase their absorption. Some seek to stabilize the TTPs to prevent their degradation by proteolytic enzymes in the GI tract by administering them together with protease inhibitors, while others modify TPPs with mucoadhesive polymers like polyethylene glycol (PEG) to allow them to interact with the mucus layer, thereby delaying their clearance. The further barrier provided by the epithelial cell membrane can be overcome by the addition of a cell-penetrating peptide (CPP) and the use of a carrier molecule such as a liposome, microsphere, or nanosphere to transport the TPP-CPP chimera. Enteric coatings have also been used to help TPPs reach the small intestine. Key efficacious TPP formulations that have been approved for clinical use will be discussed.

Highlights

  • Small molecule drugs (

  • An ideal oral delivery platform for TPP drugs should retain their therapeutic activity and protect them from the proteolytic enzymes and acidic environment found in the stomach, before releasing their active forms in the neutral environment of the intestine to get absorbed into the bloodstream

  • The amino acids produced by enzymatic degradation and other nutrients released by digestion of food are absorbed into the bloodstream from the small intestine, facilitated by the tremendously large surface area provided by the mucosal folds, villi, and microvilli

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Summary

Introduction

Small molecule drugs (

Enzymatic Barriers of the Digestive System
Mucus and Epithelial Barriers of the Intestine
Transport across the Epithelial Cell Membrane
Protein and Peptide Delivery for Pediatric Use
Strategies for Enhancing Oral Delivery of Therapeutic Peptides and Proteins
Structural Modification
Enzyme Inhibitors
PEGlyation
Mucoadhesive Polymeric Systems
Cell-Penetrating Peptides
Enteric Coatings
Liposomes
Microspheres
Clinical Investigation of Oral Peptides and Proteins
Conclusions
Methods
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