Abstract
A comparative study of indomethacin controlled release from poly(lactide-co-glycolide) (50:50, molecular weight 3000) (PLGA) microspheres loaded with two different amounts of drug (10.9 ± 1%, and 34.1 ± 1% w/w) and pure free indomethacin, considering the effects exerted by the drug on the thermotropic behavior of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine multilamellar vesicles, was carried out by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). The release was monitored by comparing the effect exerted by the free indomethacin on lipid thermotropic behavior with that of the drug released by the microspheres and relating these effects to a lipid aqueous dispersion containing the molar ratio of drug able to cause it. By DSC measurements, the pure free indomethacin was found to be able to have a fluidifying effect on the model membrane, causing a shift toward lower values of the transitional temperature (Tm), characteristic of phospholipid liposomes, without variations in the enthalpic changes (ΔH). This shift was found to be modulated by the drug molar fraction with respect to the lipid concentration in the aqueous dispersion. Successively, calorimetric measurements were performed on suspensions of blank liposomes added to weighed amounts of unloaded and indometha-cin-loaded microspheres as well as free powdered indomethacin, and the Tm shifts of the lipid bilayer caused by the drug released from the polymeric system, as well as by the free drug, were compared with that caused by free drug increasing molar fractions dispersed directly on the membrane, employed as a calibration curve to obtain the fraction of drug released. This drug release model could be employed to determine the different kinetics involved in the drug transfer from the microspheres to a membrane. This in vitro study suggests that the kinetic process involved in drug release is influenced by the amount of drug loaded in the microspheres. This calorimetric study shows that the PLGA microspheres are a good delivery system able to sustain drug release. Moreover, the DSC technique applied to the drug interaction with biomembranes constitutes a good tool for determining the drug release representing an innovative alternative in vitro model.
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