Abstract

Acne vulgaris is a common skin disease that affects everybody at least once in their lives. The treatment is challenging because the stratum corneum contains rigid corneocytes surrounded by intercellular lamellae that are difficult to bypass. In the present study, we intended to formulate an effective nanoemulsion that could deliver isotretinoin (ITT) with enhanced solubility, permeability, and bioavailability across the skin. ITT can have a serious hepatotoxic effect if given too frequently or erratically. Therefore, to overcome the aforesaid limitation, quercetin (QRS), a hepatoprotective agent, was incorporated into the formulation. Initially, the ITT solubility was determined in various surfactants and cosurfactants to select the essential ingredients to be used in the formulation and to optimize a nanoemulsion that could enhance the solubility and permeability of ITT and its antimicrobial activity against Staphyloccocus aureus, which is the main microorganism responsible for acne vulgaris. The mixture design was applied to study the interactions and optimize the independent variables that could match the prerequisites of selected dependent responses. A formulation containing 0.25 g of rosehip oil, 0.45 g of surfactant (Lauroglycol-90), and 0.3 g of cosurfactant (propylene glycol) was chosen as an optimized desirable formulation. The optimized batch was loaded with QRS and evaluated for in vitro and ex vivo permeation. The in vivo hepatotoxicity was assessed through topical administration. Permeability studies confirmed the enhanced permeation percentage of ITT (52.11 ± 2.85%) and QRS (25.44 ± 3.18%) of the optimized formulation, with an enhanced steady-state flux (Jss). The in vivo studies conducted on experimental animals demonstrated superior hepatoprotective activity of the prepared optimized formulation compared with other formulations of drugs and commercially marketed products. We anticipate that this optimized ITT formulation, followed up with good clinical evaluations, can be a breakthrough in the safe treatment of acne vulgaris.

Highlights

  • Acne is the common skin disease for which most patients attempt to get a dermatologic cure [1,2]

  • A topical nanoemulsion of ITT was successfully optimized in conjunction with QRS to enhance the permeability and to study the relevance of hepatoprotective agents from the formulation

  • ITT exhibited maximum solubility in the Lauroglycol-90 surfactant and propylene glycol cosurfactant, and this further optimized using the quality by design desirability approach

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Summary

Introduction

Acne is the common skin disease for which most patients attempt to get a dermatologic cure [1,2]. Dermatological and cosmetic efforts have begun to concentrate on the microbiome of the human skin. Staphylococcus aureus adapts to evolving microenvironments of the skin and may become an opportunistic pathogen causing acne or atopic dermatitis [3]. S. aureus is a gram-positive, anaerobic organism that usually causes superficial sebaceous unit infections [4]. The precise contribution of S. aureus to acne is not entirely clear [5]. In chronic inflammatory skin diseases, the microbe can amplify symptoms

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