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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Unraveling the behavior of oral drug products inside the human gastrointestinal tract using the aspiration technique: History, methodology and applications

Bart HensJan TackGordon L. AmidonPaulo PaixãoTim VanuytselMaura CorsettiHans LennernäsMaria VertzoniPeter LangguthWilliam L. HaslerJason BakerBertil AbrahamssonMarival BermejoPatrick AugustijnsChristos Reppas

subject

Drugmedia_common.quotation_subjectGastric motilityAdministration OralPharmaceutical Science02 engineering and technologyBioinformatics030226 pharmacology & pharmacyIntestinal absorptionPharmaceutical Sciences03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineHumansMedicinePharmaceutical sciencesmedia_commonIntraluminal drug and formulation behaviorGastrointestinal drug concentrationsAspiration studiesbusiness.industryIntestinal absorptionHuman gastrointestinal tractHealthy subjectsFarmaceutiska vetenskaper021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologySampling techniqueGastrointestinal TractDrug Liberationmedicine.anatomical_structureIntestinal AbsorptionPharmaceutical PreparationsSolubilityDrug product0210 nano-technologybusinessOral retinoid

description

Fluid sampling from the gastrointestinal (GI) tract has been applied as a valuable tool to gain more insight into the fluids present in the human GI tract and to explore the dynamic interplay of drug release, dissolution, precipitation and absorption after drug product administration to healthy subjects. In the last twenty years, collaborative initiatives have led to a plethora of clinical aspiration studies that aimed to unravel the luminal drug behavior of an orally administered drug product. The obtained drug concentration-time profiles from different segments in the GI tract were a valuable source of information to optimize and/or validate predictive in vitro and in silico tools, frequently applied in the non-clinical stage of drug product development. Sampling techniques are presently not only being considered as a stand-alone technique but are also used in combination with other in vivo techniques (e.g., gastric motility recording, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)). By doing so, various physiological variables can be mapped simultaneously and evaluated for their impact on luminal drug and formulation behavior. This comprehensive review aims to describe the history, challenges and opportunities of the aspiration technique with a specific focus on how this technique can unravel the luminal behavior of drug products inside the human GI tract by providing a summary of studies performed over the last 20 years. A section 'Best practices' on how to perform the studies and how to treat the aspirated samples is described. In the conclusion, we focus on future perspectives concerning this technique. ispartof: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES vol:155 ispartof: location:Netherlands status: published

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejps.2020.105517