Abstract
Solid lipid nanoparticles (SLN®), nanostructured lipid carriers (NLC®), and lipid–drug conjugates (LDC®), commonly produced by high-pressure homogenization, are interesting vectors for oral delivery of lipophilic and, to a certain extent, hydrophilic substances. Their production can be done without the use of organic solvents. Techniques to make them a physically stable delivery system have been developed. Scaling up of the production process from lab-size to large-scale dimensions using high-pressure homogenization can be easily achieved by using a different type of homogenizer. The machines used for large-scale production often yield an even better product quality than the lab-scale types. This review article covers the methods of production, characterization, mechanisms of oral bioavailability enhancement, scale-up, final oral dosage forms, and regulatory aspects of lipid nanoparticles for oral drug delivery. It focuses mainly on high-pressure homogenization production methods.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
This work was supported by Galenos Fellowship in the Framework of the EU Project “Towards a European PhD in Advanced Drug Delivery,” Marie Curie Contract MEST CT-2004–404992.