Abstract

The aim of this work was to investigate the effect of acidic pH representative of gastric fluid on the release of 5-aminosalicylic acid from beads coated with pectin/ethylcellulose as film coating intended for drug delivery to the colon, in media mimicking the lower gastrointestinal (GI) tract and representative of colonic conditions. In this work, the in vitro incubation of the beads in acid medium was found to influence the hydration and the swelling characteristics of pectin after transfer into simulated intestinal fluid and simulated cecal fluid containing pectinolytic enzymes. Moreover, the drug release profiles from the beads in simulated intestinal fluid after incubation for 2 h or 30 min in simulated gastric fluid vs. no acid incubation were found to be very different. The in vitro degradation of pectin in the coat by pectinolytic enzymes in simulated cecal fluid depended on whether the beads were placed in simulated gastric fluid prior to testing in simulated intestinal fluid. The percentage drug release also depended on the ratio of pectin to ethylcellulose in the coat.

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