Description

Book Synopsis
Drug therapy via inhalation route is at the cutting edge of modern drug delivery research. There has been significant progress on the understanding of drug therapy via inhalation products.

Table of Contents

List of Contributors xiii

Series Preface xvii

Preface xix

1. Lung Anatomy and Physiology and Their Implications for Pulmonary Drug Delivery 1
Rahul K. Verma, Mariam Ibrahim, and Lucila Garcia-Contreras

1.1 Introduction 2

1.2 Anatomy and Physiology of Lungs 2

1.2.1 Macro- and Microstructure of the Airways and Alveoli as It Pertains to Drug Delivery 2

1.2.2 Lung Surfactant 4

1.2.3 Pulmonary Blood Circulation 5

1.3 Mechanisms of Aerosol Deposition 5

1.3.1 Impaction 6

1.3.2 Sedimentation 6

1.3.3 Interception 6

1.3.4 Diffusion 7

1.4 Drug Absorption 7

1.4.1 Mechanisms of Drug Absorption from the Lungs 7

1.5 Physiological Factors Affecting the Therapeutic Effectiveness of Drugs Delivered by the Pulmonary Route 8

1.5.1 Airway Geometry 8

1.5.2 Inhalation Mode 8

1.5.3 Airflow Rate 9

1.5.4 Mechanism of Particle Clearance 9

1.5.5 Lung Receptors 10

1.5.6 Disease States 11

1.5.7 Effect of Age and Gender Difference 11

1.6 Computer Simulations to Describe Aerosol Deposition in Health and Disease 11

1.6.1 Semiempirical Models 12

1.6.2 Deterministic Models 12

1.6.3 Trumpet Models (One-Dimensional) 12

1.6.4 Stochastic, Asymmetric Generation Models 13

1.6.5 Computation Fluid Dynamics (CFD)-Based Model 13

1.7 Conclusions 13

References 14

2. The Role of Functional Lung Imaging in the Improvement of Pulmonary Drug Delivery 19
Andreas Fouras and Stephen Dubsky

2.1 Introduction 19

2.1.1 Particle Deposition 20

2.1.2 Regional Action of Delivered Drug 22

2.1.3 The Role of Functional Lung Imaging in Pulmonary Drug Delivery 22

2.2 Established Functional Lung Imaging Technologies 23

2.2.1 Computed Tomography 23

2.2.2 Ventilation Measurement using 4DCT Registration-based Methods 24

2.2.3 Hyperpolarized Magnetic Resonance Imaging 24

2.2.4 Electrical Impedance Tomography 25

2.2.5 Nuclear Medical Imaging (PET/SPECT) 25

2.3 Emerging Technologies 26

2.3.1 Phase-contrast Imaging 26

2.3.2 Grating Interferometry 27

2.3.3 Propagation-based Phase-contrast Imaging 28

2.3.4 Functional Lung Imaging using Phase Contrast 28

2.3.5 Laboratory Propagation-based Phase-contrast Imaging 29

2.4 Conclusion 30

References 31

3. Dry Powder Inhalation for Pulmonary Delivery: Recent Advances and Continuing Challenges 35
Simone R. Carvalho, Alan B. Watts, Jay I. Peters, and Robert O. Williams III

3.1 Introduction 36

3.2 Dry Powder Inhaler Devices 37

3.2.1 Overview 37

3.2.2 Recent Innovations in Dry Powder Inhaler Technology 39

3.3 New Developments in DPI Formulations and Delivery 43

3.3.1 Particle Surface Modification 43

3.3.2 Particle Engineering Technology for Pulmonary Delivery 44

3.4 Characterization Methods of Dry Powder Inhaler Formulations 50

3.5 Conclusion 52

References 53

4. Pulmonary Drug Delivery to the Pediatric Population – A State-of-the-Art Review 63
Marie-Pierre Flament

4.1 Introduction 63

4.2 Patient Consideration 64

4.2.1 Anatomy and Physiology of Children’s Lungs 64

4.2.2 Nasal Versus Oral Inhalation 65

4.2.3 Patient-related Factors Influencing Aerosol Deposition 66

4.2.4 Age and Dosage Forms of Choice 67

4.3 Delivery Systems for the Pediatric Population 69

4.3.1 Nebulizers 69

4.3.2 Pressurized Metered Dose Inhalers 72

4.3.3 Dry Powder Inhalers 73

4.3.4 Interfaces 74

4.4 Recommendations 80

4.5 Conclusion 82

References 82

5. Formulation Strategies for Pulmonary Delivery of Poorly Soluble Drugs 87
Nathalie Wauthoz and Karim Amighi

5.1 Introduction 88

5.1.1 In vivo Fate of Inhaled Poorly Water-soluble Drugs 89

5.1.2 The Pharmacokinetics of Inhaled Poorly Water-soluble Drugs Administered for Local and Systemic Action 92

5.1.3 Formulation Strategies for Pulmonary Delivery of Poorly Water-soluble Drugs 93

5.2 Co-solvents 93

5.3 Cyclodextrins 97

5.4 PEGylation 99

5.5 Reduction of Size to Micro-/Nanoparticles 100

5.5.1 Nanocrystal Suspension 101

5.5.2 Nanocrystals in a Hydrophilic Matrix System 102

5.5.3 Nanoclusters 103

5.6 Solid Dispersion/Amorphization 103

5.7 Micelles 106

5.8 Liposomes 108

5.9 Solid Lipid Nanoparticles and Nanostructured Lipid Carriers 110

5.10 Conclusion 111

References 114

6. Lipidic Micro- and Nano-Carriers for Pulmonary Drug Delivery – A State-of-the-Art Review 123
Yahya Rahimpour, Hamed Hamishehkar, and Ali Nokhodchi

6.1 Introduction 124

6.2 Pulmonary Drug Delivery 125

6.3 Liposomal Pulmonary Delivery 126

6.4 Nebulization of Liposomes 126

6.5 Liposomal Dry-powder Inhalers 128

6.6 Solid Lipid Microparticles in Pulmonary Drug Delivery 129

6.7 Solid Lipid Nanoparticles in Pulmonary Drug Delivery 131

6.8 Nanostructured Lipid Carrier (NLC) in Pulmonary Drug Delivery 133

6.9 Nanoemulsions in Pulmonary Drug Delivery 134

6.10 Conclusion and Perspectives 135

References 136

7. Chemical and Compositional Characterisation of Lactose as a Carrier in Dry Powder Inhalers 143
Rim Jawad, Gary P. Martin and Paul G. Royall

7.1 Introduction 144

7.2 Production of Lactose 145

7.3 Lactose: Chemical Forms, Solid-State Composition, Physicochemical Properties 147

7.4 Epimerisation of Lactose 150

7.5 Analysis of Lactose 151

7.5.1 Powder X-ray Diffraction 152

7.5.2 Nuclear Magnetic Resonance 153

7.5.3 Infrared Spectroscopy 156

7.5.4 Differential Scanning Calorimetry 157

7.5.5 Polarimetry 158

7.6 The Influence of the Chemical and Solid-State Composition of Lactose Carriers on the Aerosolisation of DPI Formulations 159

7.7 Conclusions 163

References 163

8. Particle Engineering for Improved Pulmonary Drug Delivery Through Dry Powder Inhalers 171
Waseem Kaialy and Ali Nokhodchi

8.1 Introduction 172

8.2 Dry Powder Inhalers 172

8.3 Particle Engineering to Improve the Performance of DPIs 172

8.3.1 Crystallization 173

8.3.2 Spray-drying 174

8.3.3 Spray-freeze-drying 177

8.3.4 Supercritical Fluid Technology 177

8.3.5 Pressure Swing Granulation (PSG) Technique 178

8.4 Engineered Carrier Particles for Improved Pulmonary Drug Delivery from Dry Powder Inhalers 178

8.5 Relationships between Physical Properties of Engineered Particles and Dry Powder Inhaler Performance 182

8.5.1 Particle Size 182

8.5.2 Flow Properties 184

8.5.3 Particle Shape 185

8.5.4 Particle Surface Texture 187

8.5.5 Fine Particle Additives 188

8.5.6 Surface Area 188

8.6 Conclusions 189

References 189

9. Particle Surface Roughness – Its Characterisation and Impact on Dry Powder Inhaler Performance 199
Bernice Mei Jin Tan, Celine Valeria Liew, Lai Wah Chan, and Paul Wan Sia Heng

9.1 Introduction 200

9.2 What is Surface Roughness? 200

9.3 Measurement of Particle Surface Roughness 202

9.3.1 General Factors to Consider During a Measurement 202

9.3.2 Direct Methods to Profile or Visualise Surface Roughness 204

9.3.3 Indirect Measurement of Surface Roughness 206

9.4 Impact of Surface Roughness on Carrier Performance – Theoretical Considerations 206

9.4.1 Mixing and Blend Stability 206

9.4.2 Drug-carrying Capacity 207

9.4.3 Drug Adhesion 207

9.4.4 Drug Detachment 208

9.4.5 Particle Arrangement in Ordered Mixtures After the Addition of Fine Excipient 209

9.5 Particle Surface Modification 210

9.5.1 Spray Drying 210

9.5.2 Solution Phase Processing 211

9.5.3 Crystallisation 213

9.5.4 Sieving 213

9.5.5 Fluid-bed Coating 213

9.5.6 Dry Powder Coating 213

9.6 Conclusion 215

References 215

10. Dissolution: A Critical Performance Characteristic of Inhaled Products? 223
Ben Forbes, Nathalie Hauet Richer, and Francesca Buttini

10.1 Introduction 223

10.2 Dissolution of Inhaled Products 224

10.2.1 Dissolution Rate 224

10.2.2 Dissolution in the Lungs 224

10.2.3 Case for Dissolution Testing 225

10.2.4 Design of Dissolution Test Systems 226

10.3 Particle Testing and Dissolution Media 226

10.3.1 Particle Collection 226

10.3.2 Dissolution Media 229

10.4 Dissolution Test Apparatus 230

10.4.1 USP Apparatus 1 (Basket) 231

10.4.2 USP Apparatus 2 (Paddle) and USP Apparatus 5 (Paddle Over Disc) 232

10.4.3 USP Apparatus 4 (Flow-Through Cell) 232

10.4.4 Diffusion-Controlled Cell Systems (Franz Cell, Transwell, Dialysis) 233

10.4.5 Methodological Considerations 234

10.5 Data Analysis and Interpretation 235

10.5.1 Modelling 236

10.5.2 Comparing Dissolution Profiles (Model-independent Method for Comparison) 237

10.6 Conclusions 237

References 238

11. Drug Delivery Strategies for Pulmonary Administration of Antibiotics 241
Anna Giulia Balducci, Ruggero Bettini, Paolo Colombo, and Francesca Buttini

11.1 Introduction 242

11.2 Antibiotics Used for the Treatment of Pneumoniae 243

11.3 Antibiotic Products for Inhalation Approved on the Market 244

11.4 Nebulisation 246

11.5 Antibiotic Dry Powders for Inhalation 250

11.5.1 Tobramycin 251

11.5.2 Capreomycin 252

11.5.3 Gentamicin 253

11.5.4 Ciprofloxacin 254

11.5.5 Levofloxacin 255

11.5.6 Colistimethate Sodium 256

11.6 Device and Payload of Dose 256

11.7 Conclusions 258

References 258

12. Molecular Targeted Therapy of Lung Cancer: Challenges and Promises 263
Jaleh Barar, Yadollah Omidi, and Mark Gumbleton

12.1 Introduction 265

12.2 An Overview on Lung Cancer 266

12.3 Molecular Features of Lung Cancer 268

12.3.1 Tumor Microenvironment (TME) 269

12.3.2 Tumor Angiogenesis 269

12.3.3 Tumor Stromal Components 270

12.3.4 Pharmacogenetic Markers: Cytochrome P450 270

12.4 Targeted Therapy of Solid Tumors: How and What to Target? 271

12.4.1 EPR Effect: A Rational Approach for Passive Targeting 272

12.4.2 Toward Long Circulating Anticancer Nanomedicines 273

12.4.3 Active/Direct Targeting 273

12.4.4 Overcoming Multidrug Resistance (MDR) 273

12.4.5 Antibody-Mediated Targeting 274

12.4.6 Aptamer-Mediated Targeted Therapy 276

12.4.7 Folate Receptor-Mediated Targeted Therapy 276

12.4.8 Transferrin-Mediated Targeted Therapy 276

12.4.9 Targeted Photodynamic Therapy 277

12.4.10 Multimodal Theranostics and Nanomedicines 278

12.5 Final Remarks 278

References 279

13. Defining and Controlling Blend Evolution in Inhalation Powder Formulations using a Novel Colourimetric Method 285
David Barling, David Morton, and Karen Hapgood

13.1 Introduction 286

13.1.1 Introduction to Blend Pigmentation 287

13.1.2 Previous Work in the Use of Coloured Tracers to Assess Powder Blending 288

13.1.3 Colour Tracer Properties and Approach to Blend Analysis 288

13.2 Uses and Validation 290

13.2.1 Assessment of Mixer Characteristics and Mixer Behaviour 290

13.2.2 Quantification of Content Uniformity and Energy Input 293

13.2.3 Detection and Quantification of Unintentional Milling during Mixing 295

13.2.4 Robustness of Method with Tracer Concentration 295

13.3 Comments on the Applied Suitability and Robustness in of the Tracer Method 296

13.4 Conclusions 297

Acknowledgements 297

References 297

14. Polymer-based Delivery Systems for the Pulmonary Delivery of Biopharmaceuticals 301
Nitesh K. Kunda, Iman M. Alfagih, Imran Y. Saleem, and Gillian A. Hutcheon

14.1 Introduction 302

14.2 Pulmonary Delivery of Macromolecules 302

14.3 Polymeric Delivery Systems 303

14.3.1 Micelles 304

14.3.2 Dendrimers 305

14.3.3 Particles 305

14.4 Preparation of Polymeric Nano/microparticles 305

14.4.1 Emulsification Solvent Evaporation 306

14.4.2 Emulsification Solvent Diffusion 307

14.4.3 Salting Out 307

14.5 Formulation of Nanoparticles as Dry Powders 308

14.5.1 Freeze-drying 308

14.5.2 Spray-drying 309

14.5.3 Spray-freeze-drying 309

14.5.4 Supercritical Fluid Drying 310

14.6 Carrier Properties 310

14.6.1 Size 310

14.6.2 Morphology 311

14.6.3 Surface Properties 311

14.7 Toxicity of Polymeric Delivery Systems 311

14.8 Pulmonary Delivery of Polymeric Particles 312

14.9 Conclusions 313

References 313

15. Quality by Design: Concept for Product Development of Dry-powder Inhalers 321
Al Sayyed Sallam, Sami Nazzal, Hatim S. AlKhatib, and Nabil Darwazeh

15.1 Introduction 322

15.2 Quality Target Product Profile (QTPP) 324

15.3 Critical Quality Attributes (CQA) 324

15.4 Quality Risk Management 325

15.5 Design of Experiments 326

15.6 Design Space 328

15.7 Control Strategies 328

15.8 Continual Improvement 329

15.9 Process Analytical Technology/Application in DPI 329

15.10 Particle Size 329

15.11 Crystallinity and Polymorphism 330

15.12 Scale-up and Blend Homogeneity 331

15.13 Applying of QbD Principles to Analytical Methods 331

15.14 Conclusion 332

References 332

16. Future Patient Requirements on Inhalation Devices: The Balance between Patient, Commercial, Regulatory and Technical Requirements 339
Orest Lastow

16.1 Introduction 340

16.1.1 Inhaled Drug Delivery 340

16.1.2 Patients 340

16.2 Requirements 341

16.2.1 Patient Requirements 341

16.2.2 Technical Requirements 343

16.2.3 Performance Requirements 345

16.3 Requirement Specifications 346

16.3.1 Requirement Hierarchy 346

16.3.2 Developing the Requirements 347

16.4 Product Development 350

16.5 Conclusions 351

References 352

Index 353

Pulmonary Drug Delivery

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    A Hardback by Ali Nokhodchi, Gary P. Martin

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      View other formats and editions of Pulmonary Drug Delivery by Ali Nokhodchi

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 24/07/2015
      ISBN13: 9781118799543, 978-1118799543
      ISBN10: 1118799542

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Drug therapy via inhalation route is at the cutting edge of modern drug delivery research. There has been significant progress on the understanding of drug therapy via inhalation products.

      Table of Contents

      List of Contributors xiii

      Series Preface xvii

      Preface xix

      1. Lung Anatomy and Physiology and Their Implications for Pulmonary Drug Delivery 1
      Rahul K. Verma, Mariam Ibrahim, and Lucila Garcia-Contreras

      1.1 Introduction 2

      1.2 Anatomy and Physiology of Lungs 2

      1.2.1 Macro- and Microstructure of the Airways and Alveoli as It Pertains to Drug Delivery 2

      1.2.2 Lung Surfactant 4

      1.2.3 Pulmonary Blood Circulation 5

      1.3 Mechanisms of Aerosol Deposition 5

      1.3.1 Impaction 6

      1.3.2 Sedimentation 6

      1.3.3 Interception 6

      1.3.4 Diffusion 7

      1.4 Drug Absorption 7

      1.4.1 Mechanisms of Drug Absorption from the Lungs 7

      1.5 Physiological Factors Affecting the Therapeutic Effectiveness of Drugs Delivered by the Pulmonary Route 8

      1.5.1 Airway Geometry 8

      1.5.2 Inhalation Mode 8

      1.5.3 Airflow Rate 9

      1.5.4 Mechanism of Particle Clearance 9

      1.5.5 Lung Receptors 10

      1.5.6 Disease States 11

      1.5.7 Effect of Age and Gender Difference 11

      1.6 Computer Simulations to Describe Aerosol Deposition in Health and Disease 11

      1.6.1 Semiempirical Models 12

      1.6.2 Deterministic Models 12

      1.6.3 Trumpet Models (One-Dimensional) 12

      1.6.4 Stochastic, Asymmetric Generation Models 13

      1.6.5 Computation Fluid Dynamics (CFD)-Based Model 13

      1.7 Conclusions 13

      References 14

      2. The Role of Functional Lung Imaging in the Improvement of Pulmonary Drug Delivery 19
      Andreas Fouras and Stephen Dubsky

      2.1 Introduction 19

      2.1.1 Particle Deposition 20

      2.1.2 Regional Action of Delivered Drug 22

      2.1.3 The Role of Functional Lung Imaging in Pulmonary Drug Delivery 22

      2.2 Established Functional Lung Imaging Technologies 23

      2.2.1 Computed Tomography 23

      2.2.2 Ventilation Measurement using 4DCT Registration-based Methods 24

      2.2.3 Hyperpolarized Magnetic Resonance Imaging 24

      2.2.4 Electrical Impedance Tomography 25

      2.2.5 Nuclear Medical Imaging (PET/SPECT) 25

      2.3 Emerging Technologies 26

      2.3.1 Phase-contrast Imaging 26

      2.3.2 Grating Interferometry 27

      2.3.3 Propagation-based Phase-contrast Imaging 28

      2.3.4 Functional Lung Imaging using Phase Contrast 28

      2.3.5 Laboratory Propagation-based Phase-contrast Imaging 29

      2.4 Conclusion 30

      References 31

      3. Dry Powder Inhalation for Pulmonary Delivery: Recent Advances and Continuing Challenges 35
      Simone R. Carvalho, Alan B. Watts, Jay I. Peters, and Robert O. Williams III

      3.1 Introduction 36

      3.2 Dry Powder Inhaler Devices 37

      3.2.1 Overview 37

      3.2.2 Recent Innovations in Dry Powder Inhaler Technology 39

      3.3 New Developments in DPI Formulations and Delivery 43

      3.3.1 Particle Surface Modification 43

      3.3.2 Particle Engineering Technology for Pulmonary Delivery 44

      3.4 Characterization Methods of Dry Powder Inhaler Formulations 50

      3.5 Conclusion 52

      References 53

      4. Pulmonary Drug Delivery to the Pediatric Population – A State-of-the-Art Review 63
      Marie-Pierre Flament

      4.1 Introduction 63

      4.2 Patient Consideration 64

      4.2.1 Anatomy and Physiology of Children’s Lungs 64

      4.2.2 Nasal Versus Oral Inhalation 65

      4.2.3 Patient-related Factors Influencing Aerosol Deposition 66

      4.2.4 Age and Dosage Forms of Choice 67

      4.3 Delivery Systems for the Pediatric Population 69

      4.3.1 Nebulizers 69

      4.3.2 Pressurized Metered Dose Inhalers 72

      4.3.3 Dry Powder Inhalers 73

      4.3.4 Interfaces 74

      4.4 Recommendations 80

      4.5 Conclusion 82

      References 82

      5. Formulation Strategies for Pulmonary Delivery of Poorly Soluble Drugs 87
      Nathalie Wauthoz and Karim Amighi

      5.1 Introduction 88

      5.1.1 In vivo Fate of Inhaled Poorly Water-soluble Drugs 89

      5.1.2 The Pharmacokinetics of Inhaled Poorly Water-soluble Drugs Administered for Local and Systemic Action 92

      5.1.3 Formulation Strategies for Pulmonary Delivery of Poorly Water-soluble Drugs 93

      5.2 Co-solvents 93

      5.3 Cyclodextrins 97

      5.4 PEGylation 99

      5.5 Reduction of Size to Micro-/Nanoparticles 100

      5.5.1 Nanocrystal Suspension 101

      5.5.2 Nanocrystals in a Hydrophilic Matrix System 102

      5.5.3 Nanoclusters 103

      5.6 Solid Dispersion/Amorphization 103

      5.7 Micelles 106

      5.8 Liposomes 108

      5.9 Solid Lipid Nanoparticles and Nanostructured Lipid Carriers 110

      5.10 Conclusion 111

      References 114

      6. Lipidic Micro- and Nano-Carriers for Pulmonary Drug Delivery – A State-of-the-Art Review 123
      Yahya Rahimpour, Hamed Hamishehkar, and Ali Nokhodchi

      6.1 Introduction 124

      6.2 Pulmonary Drug Delivery 125

      6.3 Liposomal Pulmonary Delivery 126

      6.4 Nebulization of Liposomes 126

      6.5 Liposomal Dry-powder Inhalers 128

      6.6 Solid Lipid Microparticles in Pulmonary Drug Delivery 129

      6.7 Solid Lipid Nanoparticles in Pulmonary Drug Delivery 131

      6.8 Nanostructured Lipid Carrier (NLC) in Pulmonary Drug Delivery 133

      6.9 Nanoemulsions in Pulmonary Drug Delivery 134

      6.10 Conclusion and Perspectives 135

      References 136

      7. Chemical and Compositional Characterisation of Lactose as a Carrier in Dry Powder Inhalers 143
      Rim Jawad, Gary P. Martin and Paul G. Royall

      7.1 Introduction 144

      7.2 Production of Lactose 145

      7.3 Lactose: Chemical Forms, Solid-State Composition, Physicochemical Properties 147

      7.4 Epimerisation of Lactose 150

      7.5 Analysis of Lactose 151

      7.5.1 Powder X-ray Diffraction 152

      7.5.2 Nuclear Magnetic Resonance 153

      7.5.3 Infrared Spectroscopy 156

      7.5.4 Differential Scanning Calorimetry 157

      7.5.5 Polarimetry 158

      7.6 The Influence of the Chemical and Solid-State Composition of Lactose Carriers on the Aerosolisation of DPI Formulations 159

      7.7 Conclusions 163

      References 163

      8. Particle Engineering for Improved Pulmonary Drug Delivery Through Dry Powder Inhalers 171
      Waseem Kaialy and Ali Nokhodchi

      8.1 Introduction 172

      8.2 Dry Powder Inhalers 172

      8.3 Particle Engineering to Improve the Performance of DPIs 172

      8.3.1 Crystallization 173

      8.3.2 Spray-drying 174

      8.3.3 Spray-freeze-drying 177

      8.3.4 Supercritical Fluid Technology 177

      8.3.5 Pressure Swing Granulation (PSG) Technique 178

      8.4 Engineered Carrier Particles for Improved Pulmonary Drug Delivery from Dry Powder Inhalers 178

      8.5 Relationships between Physical Properties of Engineered Particles and Dry Powder Inhaler Performance 182

      8.5.1 Particle Size 182

      8.5.2 Flow Properties 184

      8.5.3 Particle Shape 185

      8.5.4 Particle Surface Texture 187

      8.5.5 Fine Particle Additives 188

      8.5.6 Surface Area 188

      8.6 Conclusions 189

      References 189

      9. Particle Surface Roughness – Its Characterisation and Impact on Dry Powder Inhaler Performance 199
      Bernice Mei Jin Tan, Celine Valeria Liew, Lai Wah Chan, and Paul Wan Sia Heng

      9.1 Introduction 200

      9.2 What is Surface Roughness? 200

      9.3 Measurement of Particle Surface Roughness 202

      9.3.1 General Factors to Consider During a Measurement 202

      9.3.2 Direct Methods to Profile or Visualise Surface Roughness 204

      9.3.3 Indirect Measurement of Surface Roughness 206

      9.4 Impact of Surface Roughness on Carrier Performance – Theoretical Considerations 206

      9.4.1 Mixing and Blend Stability 206

      9.4.2 Drug-carrying Capacity 207

      9.4.3 Drug Adhesion 207

      9.4.4 Drug Detachment 208

      9.4.5 Particle Arrangement in Ordered Mixtures After the Addition of Fine Excipient 209

      9.5 Particle Surface Modification 210

      9.5.1 Spray Drying 210

      9.5.2 Solution Phase Processing 211

      9.5.3 Crystallisation 213

      9.5.4 Sieving 213

      9.5.5 Fluid-bed Coating 213

      9.5.6 Dry Powder Coating 213

      9.6 Conclusion 215

      References 215

      10. Dissolution: A Critical Performance Characteristic of Inhaled Products? 223
      Ben Forbes, Nathalie Hauet Richer, and Francesca Buttini

      10.1 Introduction 223

      10.2 Dissolution of Inhaled Products 224

      10.2.1 Dissolution Rate 224

      10.2.2 Dissolution in the Lungs 224

      10.2.3 Case for Dissolution Testing 225

      10.2.4 Design of Dissolution Test Systems 226

      10.3 Particle Testing and Dissolution Media 226

      10.3.1 Particle Collection 226

      10.3.2 Dissolution Media 229

      10.4 Dissolution Test Apparatus 230

      10.4.1 USP Apparatus 1 (Basket) 231

      10.4.2 USP Apparatus 2 (Paddle) and USP Apparatus 5 (Paddle Over Disc) 232

      10.4.3 USP Apparatus 4 (Flow-Through Cell) 232

      10.4.4 Diffusion-Controlled Cell Systems (Franz Cell, Transwell, Dialysis) 233

      10.4.5 Methodological Considerations 234

      10.5 Data Analysis and Interpretation 235

      10.5.1 Modelling 236

      10.5.2 Comparing Dissolution Profiles (Model-independent Method for Comparison) 237

      10.6 Conclusions 237

      References 238

      11. Drug Delivery Strategies for Pulmonary Administration of Antibiotics 241
      Anna Giulia Balducci, Ruggero Bettini, Paolo Colombo, and Francesca Buttini

      11.1 Introduction 242

      11.2 Antibiotics Used for the Treatment of Pneumoniae 243

      11.3 Antibiotic Products for Inhalation Approved on the Market 244

      11.4 Nebulisation 246

      11.5 Antibiotic Dry Powders for Inhalation 250

      11.5.1 Tobramycin 251

      11.5.2 Capreomycin 252

      11.5.3 Gentamicin 253

      11.5.4 Ciprofloxacin 254

      11.5.5 Levofloxacin 255

      11.5.6 Colistimethate Sodium 256

      11.6 Device and Payload of Dose 256

      11.7 Conclusions 258

      References 258

      12. Molecular Targeted Therapy of Lung Cancer: Challenges and Promises 263
      Jaleh Barar, Yadollah Omidi, and Mark Gumbleton

      12.1 Introduction 265

      12.2 An Overview on Lung Cancer 266

      12.3 Molecular Features of Lung Cancer 268

      12.3.1 Tumor Microenvironment (TME) 269

      12.3.2 Tumor Angiogenesis 269

      12.3.3 Tumor Stromal Components 270

      12.3.4 Pharmacogenetic Markers: Cytochrome P450 270

      12.4 Targeted Therapy of Solid Tumors: How and What to Target? 271

      12.4.1 EPR Effect: A Rational Approach for Passive Targeting 272

      12.4.2 Toward Long Circulating Anticancer Nanomedicines 273

      12.4.3 Active/Direct Targeting 273

      12.4.4 Overcoming Multidrug Resistance (MDR) 273

      12.4.5 Antibody-Mediated Targeting 274

      12.4.6 Aptamer-Mediated Targeted Therapy 276

      12.4.7 Folate Receptor-Mediated Targeted Therapy 276

      12.4.8 Transferrin-Mediated Targeted Therapy 276

      12.4.9 Targeted Photodynamic Therapy 277

      12.4.10 Multimodal Theranostics and Nanomedicines 278

      12.5 Final Remarks 278

      References 279

      13. Defining and Controlling Blend Evolution in Inhalation Powder Formulations using a Novel Colourimetric Method 285
      David Barling, David Morton, and Karen Hapgood

      13.1 Introduction 286

      13.1.1 Introduction to Blend Pigmentation 287

      13.1.2 Previous Work in the Use of Coloured Tracers to Assess Powder Blending 288

      13.1.3 Colour Tracer Properties and Approach to Blend Analysis 288

      13.2 Uses and Validation 290

      13.2.1 Assessment of Mixer Characteristics and Mixer Behaviour 290

      13.2.2 Quantification of Content Uniformity and Energy Input 293

      13.2.3 Detection and Quantification of Unintentional Milling during Mixing 295

      13.2.4 Robustness of Method with Tracer Concentration 295

      13.3 Comments on the Applied Suitability and Robustness in of the Tracer Method 296

      13.4 Conclusions 297

      Acknowledgements 297

      References 297

      14. Polymer-based Delivery Systems for the Pulmonary Delivery of Biopharmaceuticals 301
      Nitesh K. Kunda, Iman M. Alfagih, Imran Y. Saleem, and Gillian A. Hutcheon

      14.1 Introduction 302

      14.2 Pulmonary Delivery of Macromolecules 302

      14.3 Polymeric Delivery Systems 303

      14.3.1 Micelles 304

      14.3.2 Dendrimers 305

      14.3.3 Particles 305

      14.4 Preparation of Polymeric Nano/microparticles 305

      14.4.1 Emulsification Solvent Evaporation 306

      14.4.2 Emulsification Solvent Diffusion 307

      14.4.3 Salting Out 307

      14.5 Formulation of Nanoparticles as Dry Powders 308

      14.5.1 Freeze-drying 308

      14.5.2 Spray-drying 309

      14.5.3 Spray-freeze-drying 309

      14.5.4 Supercritical Fluid Drying 310

      14.6 Carrier Properties 310

      14.6.1 Size 310

      14.6.2 Morphology 311

      14.6.3 Surface Properties 311

      14.7 Toxicity of Polymeric Delivery Systems 311

      14.8 Pulmonary Delivery of Polymeric Particles 312

      14.9 Conclusions 313

      References 313

      15. Quality by Design: Concept for Product Development of Dry-powder Inhalers 321
      Al Sayyed Sallam, Sami Nazzal, Hatim S. AlKhatib, and Nabil Darwazeh

      15.1 Introduction 322

      15.2 Quality Target Product Profile (QTPP) 324

      15.3 Critical Quality Attributes (CQA) 324

      15.4 Quality Risk Management 325

      15.5 Design of Experiments 326

      15.6 Design Space 328

      15.7 Control Strategies 328

      15.8 Continual Improvement 329

      15.9 Process Analytical Technology/Application in DPI 329

      15.10 Particle Size 329

      15.11 Crystallinity and Polymorphism 330

      15.12 Scale-up and Blend Homogeneity 331

      15.13 Applying of QbD Principles to Analytical Methods 331

      15.14 Conclusion 332

      References 332

      16. Future Patient Requirements on Inhalation Devices: The Balance between Patient, Commercial, Regulatory and Technical Requirements 339
      Orest Lastow

      16.1 Introduction 340

      16.1.1 Inhaled Drug Delivery 340

      16.1.2 Patients 340

      16.2 Requirements 341

      16.2.1 Patient Requirements 341

      16.2.2 Technical Requirements 343

      16.2.3 Performance Requirements 345

      16.3 Requirement Specifications 346

      16.3.1 Requirement Hierarchy 346

      16.3.2 Developing the Requirements 347

      16.4 Product Development 350

      16.5 Conclusions 351

      References 352

      Index 353

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