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. 2024 Jul 9;25(6):157.
doi: 10.1208/s12249-024-02861-3.

Pharmacokinetics and Histotoxic Profile of a Novel Azithromycin-Loaded Lipid-Based Nanoformulation

Affiliations

Pharmacokinetics and Histotoxic Profile of a Novel Azithromycin-Loaded Lipid-Based Nanoformulation

Aziz Ur Rahman et al. AAPS PharmSciTech. .

Abstract

Azithromycin traditional formulations possesses poor oral bioavailability which necessitates development of new formulation with enhanced bioavailability of the drug. The objective of current research was to explore the kinetics and safety profile of the newly developed azithromycin lipid-based nanoformulation (AZM-NF). In the in-vitro study of kinetics profiling, azithromycin (AZM) release was assessed using dialysis membrane enclosing equal quantity of either AZM-NF, oral suspension of azithromycin commercial product (AZM-CP), or azithromycin pure drug (AZM-PD) in simulated intestinal fluid. The ex-vivo study was performed using rabbit intestinal segments in physiological salts solution in a tissue bath. The in-vivo study was investigated by oral administration of AZM to rabbits while taking blood samples at predetermined time-intervals, followed by HPLC analysis. The toxicity study was conducted in rats to observe histopathological changes in rat's internal organs. In the in-vitro study, maximum release was 95.38 ± 4.58% for AZM-NF, 72.79 ± 8.85% for AZM-CP, and 46.13 ± 8.19% for AZM-PD (p < 0.0001). The ex-vivo investigation revealed maximum permeation of 85.68 ± 5.87 for AZM-NF and 64.88 ± 5.87% for AZM-CP (p < 0.001). The in-vivo kinetics showed Cmax 0.738 ± 0.038, and 0.599 ± 0.082 µg/ml with Tmax of 4 and 2 h for AZM-NF and AZM-CP respectively (p < 0.01). Histopathological examination revealed compromised myocardial fibers integrity by AZM-CP only, liver and kidney showed mild aberrations by both formulations, with no remarkable changes in the rest of studied organs. The results showed that AZM-NF exhibited significantly enhanced bioavailability with comparative safer profile to AZM-CP investigated.

Keywords: Azithromycin; Ex-vivo permeability; In-vitro release kinetics; In-vivo bioavailability studies; Kinetics profiling; Lipid-based nanoformulation.

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