Large porous particles for pulmonary drug delivery

DA Edwards, J Hanes, G Caponetti, J Hrkach… - Science, 1997 - science.org
DA Edwards, J Hanes, G Caponetti, J Hrkach, A Ben-Jebria, ML Eskew, J Mintzes, D Deaver…
Science, 1997science.org
A new type of inhalation aerosol, characterized by particles of small mass density and large
size, permitted the highly efficient delivery of inhaled therapeutics into the systemic
circulation. Particles with mass densities less than 0.4 gram per cubic centimeter and mean
diameters exceeding 5 micrometers were inspired deep into the lungs and escaped the
lungs' natural clearance mechanisms until the inhaled particles delivered their therapeutic
payload. Inhalation of large porous insulin particles resulted in elevated systemic levels of …
A new type of inhalation aerosol, characterized by particles of small mass density and large size, permitted the highly efficient delivery of inhaled therapeutics into the systemic circulation. Particles with mass densities less than 0.4 gram per cubic centimeter and mean diameters exceeding 5 micrometers were inspired deep into the lungs and escaped the lungs' natural clearance mechanisms until the inhaled particles delivered their therapeutic payload. Inhalation of large porous insulin particles resulted in elevated systemic levels of insulin and suppressed systemic glucose levels for 96 hours, whereas small nonporous insulin particles had this effect for only 4 hours. High systemic bioavailability of testosterone was also achieved by inhalation delivery of porous particles with a mean diameter (20 micrometers) approximately 10 times that of conventional inhaled therapeutic particles.
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