The impact of solvent selection : strategies to guide the manufacturing of liposomes using microfluidics
Webb, Cameron and Khadke, Swapnil and Schmidt, Signe Tandrup and Roces, Carla B. and Forbes, Neil and Berrie, Gillian and Perrie, Yvonne (2019) The impact of solvent selection : strategies to guide the manufacturing of liposomes using microfluidics. Pharmaceutics, 11 (12). 653. ISSN 1999-4923 (https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics11120653)
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Abstract
The aim of this work was to assess the impact of solvent selection on the microfluidic production of liposomes. To achieve this, liposomes were manufactured using small-scale and bench-scale microfluidics systems using three aqueous miscible solvents (methanol, ethanol or isopropanol, alone or in combination). Liposomes composed of different lipid compositions were manufactured using these different solvents and characterised to investigate the influence of solvents on liposomes attributes. Our studies demonstrate that solvent selection is a key consideration during the microfluidics manufacturing process, not only when considering lipid solubility but also with regard to the resultant liposome critical quality attributes. In general, reducing the polarity of the solvent (from methanol to IPA) increased the liposome particle size without impacting on liposome short-term stability or release charcteristics. Furthermore, solvent combinations such as methanol/IPA mixtures can be used to modify solvent polarity and the resultant liposome particle size. However, the impact of solvent choice on the liposome product is also influenced by the liposome formulation; liposomes containing charged lipids tended to show more sensitivity to solvent selection and formulations containing increased concentrations of cholesterol or PEG were less influenced by the choice of solvent. Indeed, incorporation of 14 wt % or more of pegylated lipid was shown to negate the impact of solvent selection.
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Item type: Article ID code: 70688 Dates: DateEvent4 December 2019Published30 November 2019AcceptedSubjects: Medicine > Therapeutics. Pharmacology Department: Faculty of Science > Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 05 Dec 2019 08:40 Last modified: 20 Nov 2024 01:18 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/70688