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Featured researches published by Marzia Cirri.


International Journal of Pharmaceutics | 2003

Ternary systems of naproxen with hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin and aminoacids

Paola Mura; Francesca Maestrelli; Marzia Cirri

Abstract The purpose of the present study was to investigate the combined effect of hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin and different aminoacids ( l -lysine, LYS; l -valine, VAL; l -iso-leucine, LEU; and l -arginine, ARG) on the solubility of naproxen, a poorly water-soluble anti-inflammatory drug. Aqueous solubilities of naproxen in binary and ternary systems with hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin and each aminoacid were determined. The pH was measured in all solubility studies and its role on drug solubility variation was evaluated. Arginine was the most effective aminoacid in improving drug solubility and the only one which showed a synergistic effect when used in combination with hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin. In contrast, some reduction with respect to the theoretical drug solubility (i.e. the sum of the solubilities in the presence of cyclodextrin and aminoacid separately) was observed in ternary combinations with the other aminoacids. This occurred also in the case of lysine, despite the higher solubility of its ternary system in comparison with the binary cyclodextrin complex at pH 7. Phase-solubility experiments showed that the ternary system with arginine (pH≈7) exhibited a stability constant 3.6 times higher and was about 5.5 times more effective in improving drug solubility than the binary complex in buffered (pH≈7) aqueous solutions. These results demonstrated that the high increase in the drug solubility shown by ternary systems with arginine was not simply due to a favorable pH change but to multicomponent complex formation. Solid products of naproxen with hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin, and/or arginine, prepared by different methods, were characterized by Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC), Hot Stage Microscopy (HSM) and Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM).


Drug Development and Industrial Pharmacy | 2004

Development and Evaluation of Glyburide Fast Dissolving Tablets Using Solid Dispersion Technique

Maurizio Valleri; Paola Mura; Francesca Maestrelli; Marzia Cirri; R. Ballerini

Glyburide is a poorly water‐soluble oral hypoglycemic agent, with problems of variable bioavailability and bio‐inequivalence related to its poor water‐solubility. This work investigated the possibility of developing glyburide tablets, allowing fast, reproducible, and complete drug dissolution, by using drug solid dispersion in polyethylene glycol. Phase‐solubility studies were performed to investigate the drug‐carrier interactions in solution, whereas differential scanning calorimetry, X‐ray powder diffraction, and infrared spectroscopy were used to characterize the solid state of solid dispersions. The effects of several variables related to both solid dispersion preparation (cofusion or coevaporation technique, drug‐to‐carrier ratio, polyethylene glycol molecular weight) and tablet production (direct compression or previous wet‐granulation, tablet hardness, drug, and solid dispersion particle size) on drug dissolution behavior were investigated. Tablets obtained by direct compression, with a hardness of 7–9 Kp, and containing larger sized solid dispersions (20–35 mesh, i.e., 850–500 µm) of micronized glyburide in polyethylene glycol 6000 prepared by the cofusion method gave the best results, with a 135% increase in drug dissolution efficiency at 60 min in comparison with a reference tablet formulation containing the pure micronized drug. Moreover, the glyburide dissolution profile from the newly developed tablets was clearly better than those from various commercial tablets at the same drug dosage.


European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics | 2008

Development of enteric-coated calcium pectinate microspheres intended for colonic drug delivery

Francesca Maestrelli; Marzia Cirri; Giovanna Corti; Natascia Mennini; Paola Mura

Enteric-coated calcium pectinate microspheres (MS) aimed for colon drug delivery have been developed, by using theophylline as a model drug. The influence of pectin type (amidated or non-amidated) and MS preparation conditions (CaCl2 concentration and cross-linking time) was investigated upon the drug entrapment efficiency and its release behaviour. Drug stability and drug-polymer interactions were studied by Differential Scanning Calorimetry, thermogravimetry, X-ray diffractometry and FTIR spectroscopy. Enteric coating with Eudragit S100 enabled maintenance of MS integrity until its expected arrival to colon. The coating was also useful to improve the stability of MS during storage, avoiding morphologic changes observed for uncoated MS stored under ambient conditions. Entrapment efficiency increased by reducing cross-linking time, and (only in the case of non-amidated pectin) by increasing CaCl2 concentration. On the other hand, release tests performed simulating the gastro-intestinal pH variation evidenced an inverse relationship between CaCl2 concentration and drug release rate, whereas no influence of both pectin type and cross-linking time was found. Unexpectedly, addition of pectinolytic enzymes to the colonic medium did not give rise to selective enzymatic degradation of MS. Notwithstanding this unforeseen result, coated MS prepared at 2.5% w/v CaCl2 concentration were able to adequately modulate drug release through a mixed approach of pH and transit time control, avoiding drug release in the gastric ambient, and reaching the colonic targeting where 100% release was achieved within less than 24h.


European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics | 2012

Development of a new delivery system consisting in “drug – in cyclodextrin – in nanostructured lipid carriers” for ketoprofen topical delivery

Marzia Cirri; Marco Bragagni; Natascia Mennini; Paola Mura

A new delivery system based on drug cyclodextrin (Cd) complexation and loading into nanostructured lipid carriers (NLC) has been developed to improve ketoprofen therapeutic efficacy. The proposed strategy exploits both the solubilizing and stabilizing properties of Cds and the prolonged release, high tolerability and percutaneous absorption enhancer properties of NLC. Two different polymeric Cds, i.e. β-Cd-epichlorohydrin polymer (EPI-βCd) and carboxymethylathed-β-Cd-epichlorohydrin polymer (EPI-CMβCd) were tested and two different techniques to obtain solid ketoprofen-polymeric Cd complexes (i.e. co-grinding and co-lyophilization) were compared, to investigate the influence of the preparation method on the physicochemical properties of the end product. EPI-βCd was more effective than EPI-CMβCd in enhancing the solubility and dissolution properties of ketoprofen. Co-grinding in dry conditions was the best preparation technique of solid drug-Cd systems, allowing obtainment of homogeneous amorphous particles of nanometric range. NLC consisting in a mixture of Compritol® 888 ATO (glyceryl behenate) and Labrafac Lipophile were obtained by ultrasonication. Both empty and loaded NLC were suitably characterized for particle size, pH, entrapment efficiency and drug release behavior. The best (drug-Cd)-loaded NLC system, formulated into a xanthan hydrogel, exhibited drug permeation properties clearly better than those of the plain drug suspension or the plain drug-loaded NLC, in virtue of the simultaneous exploitation of the solubilizing effect of cyclodextrin and the penetration enhancer properties of NLC.


Drug Development and Industrial Pharmacy | 2005

Development of Fast-Dissolving Tablets of Flurbiprofen-Cyclodextrin Complexes

Marzia Cirri; Claudia Rangoni; Francesca Maestrelli; Giovanna Corti; Paola Mura

The present study was aimed at developing a tablet formulation based on an effective flurbiprofen-cyclodextrin system, able to allow a rapid and complete dissolution of this practically insoluble drug. Three different cyclodextrins were evaluated: the parent β-cyclodextrin (previously found to be the best partner for the drug among the natural cyclodextrins), and two amorphous, highly soluble β-cyclodextrin derivatives, i.e., methyl-β-cyclodextrin and hydroxyethyl-β-cyclodextrin. Equimolar drug-cyclodextrin binary systems prepared according to five different techniques (physical mixing, kneading, sealed-heating, coevaporation, and colyophilization) were characterized by Differential Scanning Calorimetry, x-ray powder diffractometry, infrared spectroscopy, and optical microscopy and evaluated for solubility and dissolution rate properties. The drug solubility improvement obtained by the different binary systems varied from a minimum of 2.5 times up to a maximum of 120 times, depending on both the cyclodextrin type and the system preparation method. Selected binary systems were used for preparation of direct compression tablets with reduced drug dosage (50 mg). Chitosan and spray-dried lactose, alone or in mixture, were used as excipients. All formulations containing drug-cyclodextrin systems gave a higher drug dissolved amount than the corresponding ones with drug alone (also at a dose of 100 mg); however, the drug dissolution behavior was strongly influenced by formulation factors. For example, for the same drug-cyclodextrin product the time to dissolve 50% drug varied from less than 5 minutes to more than 60 minutes, depending on the excipient used for tableting. In particular, only tablets containing the drug kneaded with methyl-β-cyclodextrin or colyophilized with β-cyclodextrin and spray-dried lactose as the only excipient satisfied the requirements of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for rapid dissolving tablets, allowing more than 85% drug to be dissolved within 30 minutes. Finally, it can be reasonably expected that the obtained drug dissolution rate improvement will result in an increase of its bioavailability, with the possibility of reducing drug dosage and side effects.


Drug Development and Industrial Pharmacy | 2004

Characterization of Ibuproxam Binary and Ternary Dispersions with Hydrophilic Carriers

Marzia Cirri; Paola Mura; A. M. Rabasco; J. M. Ginés; J. R. Moyano; M.L. González-Rodríguez

This work investigates the possibility of increasing the dissolution properties of ibuproxam (a poorly water‐soluble anti‐inflammatory drug) using hydrophilic carriers such as polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP), polyethylene glycol (PEG), or urea, alone or in combination. Phase‐solubility studies showed that the carrier solubilizing power was in the order PEG > PVP > urea and evidenced a synergistic effect in drug solubility improvement when using carrier combinations. Binary and ternary systems, at 20/80 or 20/40/40 (w/w) drug/carrier(s) ratios, prepared by coevaporation of their ethanolic solutions or by cogrinding physical mixtures in a high‐energy vibrational micromill, were characterized by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), hot stage microscopy (HSM), and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) analyses. The results of dissolution tests (USP paddle method), in terms of Dissolution Efficiency, indicated that ternary systems were up to 35% more effective than the corresponding binary preparations and coevaporated products were up to 45% more efficacious than the corresponding coground ones. The IBUX‐PEG‐PVP coevaporated was the best product, allowing a more than three‐times increase in Dissolution Efficiency with respect to drug alone; moreover, t50% ( > 60 min for pure ibuproxam) was < 10 min, and 90% dissolution was achieved after 30 min, whereas only 40% was obtained after 60 min for pure drug. The best performance of this system was attributed to a joined effect of the strong amorphizing power of PVP (as demonstrated by solid state analyses) with the high solubilizing efficacy of PEG (as emerged from phase‐solubility studies). The drug dissolution rate from solid dispersions remained practically unchanged after one‐year storage at room temperature in closed containers.


Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis | 2002

Investigation of the effects of grinding and co-grinding on physicochemical properties of glisentide

Paola Mura; Marzia Cirri; M.T Faucci; J.M Ginès-Dorado; G. P. Bettinetti

The purpose of the present study was to investigate the possibility of improving the dissolution properties of glisentide, a poorly water-soluble antidiabetic drug, by grinding in a high energy micromill, alone or in mixture with polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP). Conventional and modulated differential scanning calorimetry (DSC, MDSC), thermogravimetry (TGA), X-ray powder diffraction (XRD), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), hot-stage FT-IR thermomicroscopy and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) were used to characterize the drug solid state, whereas its dissolution rates were determined according to the dispersed amount method. The techniques utilized enabled exclusion of polymorphism phenomena as a consequence of mechanical treatment, and revealed a progressive drug amorphization during grinding. In particular, MDSC allowed a clear determination of the glass transition temperature of the amorphous drug, enabling separation of glass transition from enthalpic relaxation. The amorphous state of the ground drug was the main responsible factor for the obtained 100% dissolution efficiency increase in comparison with the untreated drug. Further significant increases in dissolution properties, directly related to the polymer content in the mixture, were obtained by co-grinding with PVP, whose presence clearly favored drug amorphization, allowing a strong reduction of time and frequency of grinding necessary for obtaining complete drug amorphization.


European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics | 2012

Quality by design approach for developing chitosan-Ca-alginate microspheres for colon delivery of celecoxib-hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin-PVP complex

Natascia Mennini; Sandra Furlanetto; Marzia Cirri; Paola Mura

The aim of the present work was to develop a new multiparticulate system, designed for colon-specific delivery of celecoxib for both systemic (in chronotherapic treatment of arthritis) and local (in prophylaxis of colon carcinogenesis) therapy. The system simultaneously benefits from ternary complexation with hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin and PVP (polyvinylpyrrolidone), to increase drug solubility, and vectorization in chitosan-Ca-alginate microspheres, to exploit the colon-specific carrier properties of these polymers. Statistical experimental design was employed to investigate the combined effect of four formulation variables, i.e., % of alginate, CaCl₂, and chitosan and time of cross-linking on microsphere entrapment efficiency (EE%) and drug amount released after 4h in colonic medium, considered as the responses to be optimized. Design of experiment was used in the context of Quality by Design, which requires a multivariate approach for understanding the multifactorial relationships among formulation parameters. Doehlert design allowed for defining a design space, which revealed that variations of the considered factors had in most cases an opposite influence on the responses. Desirability function was used to attain simultaneous optimization of both responses. The desired goals were achieved for both systemic and local use of celecoxib. Experimental values obtained from the optimized formulations were in both cases very close to the predicted values, thus confirming the validity of the generated mathematical model. These results demonstrated the effectiveness of the proposed jointed use of drug cyclodextrin complexation and chitosan-Ca-alginate microsphere vectorization, as well as the usefulness of the multivariate approach for the preparation of colon-targeted celecoxib microspheres with optimized properties.


European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2008

Microspheres for colonic delivery of ketoprofen-hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin complex

Francesca Maestrelli; Naima Zerrouk; Marzia Cirri; Natascia Mennini; Paola Mura

A new multiparticulate system, with the potential for site-specific delivery to the colon, has been developed using ketoprofen as model drug. The system simultaneously exploits cyclodextrin complexation, to improve drug solubility, and vectorization in microspheres (MS) based on Ca-pectinate and chitosan. The effect of complexation with hydroxypropyl-beta-cyclodextrin (HPbetaCyd) and of chitosan presence on drug entrapment efficiency and release properties, as well on the drug permeation rate across Caco-2 cells has been investigated. Solid-state interactions between the components have been investigated by FTIR spectroscopy, differential scanning calorimetry and X-ray powder diffractometry. The morphology of MS was examined by scanning electron microscopy. Release studies revealed a different behaviour for MS containing drug alone or as complex: drug alone was released faster than in the presence of cyclodextrin from MS without chitosan, due to a reservoir effect. The opposite was found for MS containing chitosan, due to a competition effect between polymer and drug for the cyclodextrin. Cytotoxicity tests demonstrated the safety of these formulations. Permeation studies showed an increased permeation of the drug formulated as MS, particularly marked when it was used as complex, thus revealing an enhancing power of both cyclodextrin and chitosan with a synergistic effect in improving drug permeation.


Journal of Drug Targeting | 2003

Development of Enteric-coated Pectin-based Matrix Tablets for Colonic Delivery of Theophylline

Paola Mura; Francesca Maestrelli; Marzia Cirri; M. Luisa González Rodríguez; Antonio Alvarez

The present work was aimed at developing a new colonic drug delivery system which takes advantage of the combined approaches of a specifically colon-biodegradable pectin matrix with a pH-sensitive Eudragit® S100 polymeric coating. The developed system was able to suitably retard the onset of drug release and to provide a colon-specific delivery, thus overcoming the problems of pectin solubility in the upper gastrointestinal tract and low site-specificity of simple pH-dependent systems. Due to the poor compactability properties of pectin, it was used in mixture with Emdex®, a hydrophilic directly-compressible material, in order to make it possible to prepare tablets by direct compression. Theophylline (TP) was used as model drug due to its suitable pharmacokinetic properties for colonic delivery and good absorption in the large intestine. The effects of varying the type of pectin (low and high methoxylated, or amidated), the pectin:Emdex® ratio and the level of the pH-dependent polymeric coating on drug release behavior were investigated. Release tests were performed using sequential liquids simulating the physiological variation of pH and the effect of the presence or not of pectinolytic enzymes into the simulated colonic medium was evaluated. Thirty percent (w/w) was the the minimum content of Emdex® for obtaining directly compressible tablets with sufficient hardness to withstand the coating process and 27% (w/w) was the minimum coating amount for obtaining an adequate lag time before the onset of drug release. After lag time, linear nearly zero-order profiles were obtained whose slope (i.e. the drug release rate) depended on both the Emdex® content and the pectin type. Comparison of the results obtained in the presence or not of pectynolitic enzymes allowed selection of the high methoxylated pectin as the most interesting candidate for specific colonic delivery since it was the least water-soluble and the most susceptible to enzymatic degradation, thus assuring a greater site-specificity of drug release. Finally, the importance of using appropriate dissolution test conditions to adequately characterize the drug release profiles from delivery systems endowed with a microflora-activated drug release triggering mechanism has been demonstrated.

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Paola Mura

University of Florence

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S. Pinzauti

University of Florence

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