Abstract

Although it is a front-line in tuberculosis treatment, rifampicin (RF) exhibits poor oral bioavailability and hepatotoxicity. Rectal mucoadhesive and in situ rectal gels were developed to overcome drug drawbacks. A RF/polyethylene glycol 6000 co-precipitate was first prepared in different ratios. Based on the drug solubility, the selected ratio was investigated for drug/polymer interaction and then incorporated into in situ rectal gels using Pluronic F127 (15%) and Pluronic F68 (10%) as a gel base and mucoadhesive polymers (HPMC, sodium alginate and chitosan). The formulations were assessed for gelation temperature and gel strength. The selected formulation was investigated for in vivo assessments. The results showed that a 1:1 drug/polymer ratio exhibited satisfying solubility with the recorded drug/polymer interaction. Depending on their concentrations, adding mucoadhesive polymers shifted the gelation temperature to lower temperatures and improved the gel strength. The selected formulation (F4) did not exhibit any anal leakage or marked rectal irritation. Using a validated chromatographic analytical method, F4 exhibited higher drug absorption with a 3.38-fold and 1.74-fold higher bioavailability when compared to oral drug suspension and solid suppositories, respectively. Toxicity studies showed unnoticeable hepatic injury in terms of biochemical, histopathological and immunohistochemical examinations. Together, F4 showed a potential of enhanced performance and also offered lower hepatic toxicity, thus offering an encouraging therapeutic alternative.

Highlights

  • Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious illness produced by Mycobacterium tuberculosis and its extermination is still one of the chief challenges in current public health [1]

  • Our study established a formulation of a RF-loaded mucoadhesive in situ rectal

  • Our study established a formulation of a RF-loaded mucoadhesive in situ rectal gel gel as a rational approach for improved RF delivery and liver toxicity attenuation

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Summary

Introduction

Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious illness produced by Mycobacterium tuberculosis and its extermination is still one of the chief challenges in current public health [1]. According to WHO report in 2019, TB endures as the top infectious killer worldwide, with 10 million people falling ill with TB and 1.5 million deaths in 2018 [2]. If the patient is suffering from acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), the mortality rate increases. The active drugs are available for treatment, the full treatment strategy is still facing hurdles involving long-term treatment, reduced patient compliance, drug-associated toxicity and multidrug resistance [3]. Rifampicin (RF) is a semisynthetic macrocyclic antibiotic and one of first-line antituberculosis drugs. It acts by inhibition of bacterial RNA synthesis.

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