Abstract

With the alarming rise in incidence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria and the scarcity of newly developed antibiotics, it is imperative that we design more effective formulations for already marketed antimicrobial agents. Fusidic acid (FA), one of the most widely used antibiotics in the topical treatment of several skin and eye infections, suffers from poor water-solubility, sub-optimal therapeutic efficacy, and a significant rise in FA-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (FRSA). In this work, the physico-chemical characteristics of FA were modified by nanocrystallization and lyophilization to improve its therapeutic efficacy through the dermal route. FA-nanocrystals (NC) were prepared using a modified nanoprecipitation technique and the influence of several formulation/process variables on the prepared FA-NC characteristics were optimized using full factorial statistical design. The optimized FA-NC formulation was evaluated before and after lyophilization by several in-vitro, ex-vivo, and microbiological tests. Furthermore, the lyophilized FA-NC formulation was incorporated into a cream product and its topical antibacterial efficacy was assessed in vivo using a rat excision wound infection model. Surface morphology of optimized FA-NC showed spherical particles with a mean particle size of 115 nm, span value of 1.6 and zeta potential of −11.6 mV. Differential scanning calorimetry and powder X-ray diffractometry confirmed the crystallinity of FA following nanocrystallization and lyophilization. In-vitro results showed a 10-fold increase in the saturation solubility of FA-NC while ex-vivo skin permeation studies showed a 2-fold increase in FA dermal deposition from FA-NC compared to coarse FA. Microbiological studies revealed a 4-fofd decrease in the MIC against S. aureus and S. epidermidis from FA-NC cream compared to commercial Fucidin cream. In-vivo results showed that FA-NC cream improved FA distribution and enhanced bacterial exposure in the infected wound, resulting in increased therapeutic efficacy when compared to coarse FA marketed as Fucidin cream.

Highlights

  • Topical drug delivery is generally recognized as the first-line therapy for skin conditions

  • Most of the above-mentioned nano-formulations suffer from low entrapment efficiency of encapsulated drugs, limited permeability, chemical problems associated with degradation by hydrolysis and/or oxidation and local irritation from the excipients used in these formulations, especially high amounts of surfactants

  • From all 2-way interactions between the independent variables, only the interaction between the type of the stabilizer and the drug to stabilizer ratio was found to have a moderate effect on the PS (p = 0.021)

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Summary

Introduction

Topical drug delivery is generally recognized as the first-line therapy for skin conditions. Most of the above-mentioned nano-formulations suffer from low entrapment efficiency of encapsulated drugs, limited permeability, chemical problems associated with degradation by hydrolysis and/or oxidation and local irritation from the excipients used in these formulations, especially high amounts of surfactants. For these reasons, few nano-formulations are reported to cross the skin barrier effectively, such as dendritic nanoparticles [16,17]

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