Abstract

GLP-1 receptor agonists are a class of diabetes medicines offering self-regulating glycemic efficacy and may best be administrated in long-acting forms. Among GLP-1 receptor agonists, exenatide is the one requiring the least dose so that controlled-release poly(d,l-lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) microspheres may best achieve this purpose. Based on this consideration, the present study extended the injection interval of exenatide microspheres from one week of the current dosage form to four weeks by simply blending Mg(OH)2 powder within the matrix of PLGA microspheres. Mg(OH)2 served as the diffusion channel creator in the earlier stage of the controlled-release period and the decelerator of the self-catalyzed degradation of PLGA (by the formed lactic and glycolic acids) in the later stage due to its pH-responsive solubility. As a result, exenatide gradually diffused from the microspheres through Mg(OH)2-created diffusion channels before degradation of the PLGA matrix, followed by a mild release due to Mg(OH)2-buffered degradation of the polymer skeleton. In addition, an extruding–settling process comprising squeezing the PLGA solution through a porous glass membrane and sedimentation-aided solidification of the PLGA droplets was used to prepare the microspheres to ensure narrow size distribution and 95% encapsulation efficiency in an aqueous continuous phase. A pharmacokinetic study using rhesus monkey model confirmed the above formulation design by showing a steady blood concentration profile of exenatide with reduced CMAX and dosage form index. Mg(OH)2.

Highlights

  • Microspheres produced from linear polymer or monomer polymerization are used in a wide variety of biomedical use [1,2]

  • Most of the long-acting GLP-1 receptor agonists are formulated by structural modification to extend their in vivo half-life, for which the prolonged efficacy per injection is limited to one week because of the exponential decay in blood concentration [8,9,10]

  • Microspheres prepared by the indicated byand thePhysical-Chemical

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Summary

Introduction

Microspheres produced from linear polymer or monomer polymerization are used in a wide variety of biomedical use [1,2]. While successful applications are limited to few products, microspheres remain the most feasible dosage form of biologic drugs to date to achieve weeks- or months-long efficacy per injection. This argument is especially true for GLP-1 receptor agonists, a class of smart polypeptide diabetes medicines [3,4,5], which exerts hypoglycemic efficacy in response to glucose level and should be delivered with steady and extended blood concentration to reduce injection frequency and CMAX -related side effects [6,7]. One of the long-acting hypoglycemic medicines, exenatide-loaded microspheres (BydureonTM )

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