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Research Article

Development of Enteric-coated Pectin-based Matrix Tablets for Colonic Delivery of Theophylline

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Pages 365-371 | Received 07 Jul 2003, Published online: 03 Oct 2008
 

Abstract

The present work was aimed at developing a new colonic drug delivery system which takes advantage of the combined approaches of a specifically colon-biodegradable pectin matrix with a pH-sensitive Eudragit® S100 polymeric coating. The developed system was able to suitably retard the onset of drug release and to provide a colon-specific delivery, thus overcoming the problems of pectin solubility in the upper gastrointestinal tract and low site-specificity of simple pH-dependent systems. Due to the poor compactability properties of pectin, it was used in mixture with Emdex®, a hydrophilic directly-compressible material, in order to make it possible to prepare tablets by direct compression. Theophylline (TP) was used as model drug due to its suitable pharmacokinetic properties for colonic delivery and good absorption in the large intestine. The effects of varying the type of pectin (low and high methoxylated, or amidated), the pectin:Emdex® ratio and the level of the pH-dependent polymeric coating on drug release behavior were investigated. Release tests were performed using sequential liquids simulating the physiological variation of pH and the effect of the presence or not of pectinolytic enzymes into the simulated colonic medium was evaluated. Thirty percent (w/w) was the the minimum content of Emdex® for obtaining directly compressible tablets with sufficient hardness to withstand the coating process and 27% (w/w) was the minimum coating amount for obtaining an adequate lag time before the onset of drug release. After lag time, linear nearly zero-order profiles were obtained whose slope (i.e. the drug release rate) depended on both the Emdex® content and the pectin type. Comparison of the results obtained in the presence or not of pectynolitic enzymes allowed selection of the high methoxylated pectin as the most interesting candidate for specific colonic delivery since it was the least water-soluble and the most susceptible to enzymatic degradation, thus assuring a greater site-specificity of drug release. Finally, the importance of using appropriate dissolution test conditions to adequately characterize the drug release profiles from delivery systems endowed with a microflora-activated drug release triggering mechanism has been demonstrated.

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