Abstract

Depression is a common mental disorder. Its treatment with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) is effective only in a fraction of patients, and pharmacoresistance is increasing steadily. Intranasal (IN) drug delivery to the brain stands out as a promising strategy to improve current therapeutic approaches by operating as a shuttle to overcome the blood–brain barrier. This work aimed to simultaneously administer escitalopram and paroxetine by IN route to mice. For this purpose, three nanostructured lipid carriers (NLC1, NLC2, and BorNLC) and one nanoemulsion (NE) were tested for drug loading. After their characterization, investigation of their impact on nasal cell viability and SSRI permeability assays were performed, using a human nasal RPMI 2650 cell line in air–liquid interface. In vitro assays demonstrated that NLCs, including borneol (BorNLC), significantly increased escitalopram permeability (p < 0.01) and paroxetine recovery values (p < 0.05) in relation to the other formulations and non-encapsulated drugs. IN and intravenous (IV) pharmacokinetic studies performed in vivo with a single dose of 2.38 mg/kg demonstrated similar results for escitalopram brain-to-plasma ratios. IN administrations delayed escitalopram peak concentrations in the brain for 15–60 min and no direct nose-to-brain delivery was detected. However, encapsulation with BorNLC considerably decreased escitalopram exposure in the lungs (124 μg min/g) compared with free escitalopram by IN (168 μg min/g) and IV (321 μg min/g) routes. Surprisingly, BorNLC IN instillation increased concentration levels of paroxetine in the brain by five times and accelerated brain drug delivery. Once again, lung exposure was considerably lower with BorNLC (AUCt = 0.433 μg min/g) than that with IV administration (AUCt = 1.01 μg min/g) and non-encapsulated IN formulation (AUCt = 2.82 μg min/g). Direct nose-to-brain delivery was observed for paroxetine IN administration with a direct transport percentage (DTP) of 56.9%. If encapsulated, it increases to 74.2%. These results clearly emphasize that nose-to-brain delivery and lung exposure depend on the formulation and on the characteristics of the drug under investigation. NLCs seem to be an advantageous strategy for nose-to-brain delivery of lipophilic molecules, since they reduce systemic and lung exposure, thereby decreasing adverse effects. For hydrophilic compounds, NLCs are particularly important to decrease lung exposure after IN administration.

Highlights

  • Depression is a prevalent mental health disorder and a leading cause of disability, affecting approximately 17% of the global population

  • Similar to IN free escitalopram, significantly higher lung-to-plasma ratios were found after 60.0 min for IN free paroxetine, but not with IN BorNLC (Figure 6D). These results provide evidence that paroxetine incorporation into BorNLCs protects the lungs by reducing drug exposure, as it had been previously observed for escitalopram

  • A rational approach encompassing an in vitro permeability assay across RPMI 2650 cells, followed by an in vivo biodisposition study, was applied to screen antidepressant drugs and assess their distribution into the brain

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Summary

Introduction

Depression is a prevalent mental health disorder and a leading cause of disability, affecting approximately 17% of the global population. It contributes to nearly 800,000 suicides every year and constitutes a major risk factor for the development of neuropsychiatric, cardiovascular, and metabolic disorders, according to the World Health Organization (WHO, 2017). To other SSRIs that only exhibit orthosteric activity, paroxetine and escitalopram bind to a secondary allosteric site on the serotonin transporter, leading to a higher inhibition of serotonin reuptake (Mansari et al, 2006). Escitalopram and paroxetine can benefit from this combination strategy to promote efficacy and tolerability, by reducing each administered dose (Sanchez et al, 2014)

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