Abstract

A non-occluded multiple application skin blanching assay has been used to determine the effect of applied phosphatidylcholine (PC) on the bioavailability of corticosteroids. One forearm of each of ten volunteers was treated twice daily for one week with PC presented as a liposomal suspension in Sørensen's (pH 5.0) phosphate buffer (2.5 mg PC/0.5 mL) while the other arm was treated with 0.5 mL of phosphate buffer. For the following two weeks this treatment regimen was continued but in addition, each of four corticosteroid formulations (containing (i) hydrocortisone 0.1%, (ii) clobetasone butyrate 0.05%, (iii) betamethasone 0.1% and (iv) clobetasol propionate, 0.05%) was applied to sites on both arms. 5 +/- 1 mg of each cream was applied twice daily to the sites on day 1, then once daily for a further four days; after two days of no application, the protocol was repeated. Estimation of pallor was usually made four times daily. At the end of the second week of corticosteroid application the blanching response to all four formulations on the PC treated arms was significantly higher than on the buffer treated arm. Tachyphylaxis to the applied corticosteroids was markedly less apparent on the lipid-treated arms. It is proposed that the applied phospholipid either supplements the lipid content of the skin or provides a thin film in intimate epidermal contact. Such a film may promote hydration of the stratum corneum and also provide an environment into which corticosteroids initially partition before a subsequent, more controlled, release to the underlying tissue.

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