Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ravi Vaishya is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ravi Vaishya.


Expert Opinion on Drug Delivery | 2015

Long-term delivery of protein therapeutics.

Ravi Vaishya; Varun Khurana; Sulabh Patel; Ashim K. Mitra

Introduction: Proteins are effective biotherapeutics with applications in diverse ailments. Despite being specific and potent, their full clinical potential has not yet been realized. This can be attributed to short half-lives, complex structures, poor in vivo stability, low permeability, frequent parenteral administrations and poor adherence to treatment in chronic diseases. A sustained release system, providing controlled release of proteins, may overcome many of these limitations. Areas covered: This review focuses on recent development in approaches, especially polymer-based formulations, which can provide therapeutic levels of proteins over extended periods. Advances in particulate, gel-based formulations and novel approaches for extended protein delivery are discussed. Emphasis is placed on dosage form, method of preparation, mechanism of release and stability of biotherapeutics. Expert opinion: Substantial advancements have been made in the field of extended protein delivery via various polymer-based formulations over last decade despite the unique delivery-related challenges posed by protein biologics. A number of injectable sustained-release formulations have reached market. However, therapeutic application of proteins is still hampered by delivery-related issues. A large number of protein molecules are under clinical trials, and hence, there is an urgent need to develop new methods to deliver these highly potent biologics.


Journal of Ocular Pharmacology and Therapeutics | 2010

Novel nanoparticulate gel formulations of steroids for the treatment of macular edema.

Sai H.S. Boddu; Jwala Jwala; Ravi Vaishya; Ravinder Earla; Pradeep K. Karla; Dhananjay Pal; Ashim K. Mitra

PURPOSE This article describes the development and characterization of PLGA nanoparticles of dexamethasone (DEX), hydrocortisone acetate (HA), and prednisolone acetate (PA) suspended in thermosensitive gels indicated for the treatment of macular edema (ME). METHODS Nanoparticles were prepared by oil-in-water (O/W) emulsion and dialysis methods using PLGA 50:50 and PLGA 65:35. These particles were characterized for entrapment efficiency, size distribution, surface morphology, crystallinity, and in vitro release. Further, ex vivo permeation studies of DEX in suspension and nanoparticulate formulations were carried out across the rabbit sclera. RESULTS Entrapment efficiencies of DEX, HA, and PA were found to be lower with the dialysis method. O/W emulsion/solvent evaporation technique resulted in higher entrapment efficiencies, that is, 77.3%, 91.3%, 92.3% for DEX, HA, and PA, respectively. Release from nanoparticles suspended in thermosensitive gels followed zero-order kinetics with no apparent burst effect. Ex vivo permeability studies further confirmed sustained release of DEX from nanoparticles suspended in thermosensitive gels. CONCLUSIONS These novel nanoparticulate systems containing particles suspended in thermosensitive gels may provide sustained retina/choroid delivery of steroids following episcleral administration.


Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews-nanomedicine and Nanobiotechnology | 2014

Controlled ocular drug delivery with nanomicelles

Ravi Vaishya; Varun Khurana; Sulabh Patel; Ashim K. Mitra

Many vision threatening ocular diseases such as age-related macular degeneration (AMD), diabetic retinopathy, glaucoma, and proliferative vitreoretinopathy may result in blindness. Ocular drug delivery specifically to the intraocular tissues remains a challenging task due to the presence of various physiological barriers. Nonetheless, recent advancements in the field of nanomicelle-based novel drug delivery system could fulfil these unmet needs. Nanomicelles consists of amphiphilic molecules that self-assemble in aqueous media to form organized supramolecular structures. Micelles can be prepared in various sizes (10-1000 nm) and shapes depending on the molecular weights of the core and corona forming blocks. Nanomicelles have been an attractive carrier for their potential to solubilize hydrophobic molecules in aqueous solution. In addition, small size in nanometer range and highly modifiable surface properties have been reported to be advantageous in ocular drug delivery. In this review, various factors influencing rationale design of nanomicelles formulation and disposition are discussed along with case studies. Despite the progress in the field, influence of various properties of nanomicelles such as size, shape, surface charge, rigidity of structure on ocular disposition need to be studied in further details to develop an efficient nanocarrier system.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2015

Novel delivery approaches for cancer therapeutics.

Ashim K. Mitra; Vibhuti Agrahari; Abhirup Mandal; Kishore Cholkar; Chandramouli Natarajan; Sujay Shah; Mary Joseph; Hoang M. Trinh; Ravi Vaishya; Xiaoyan Yang; Yi Hao; Varun Khurana; Dhananjay Pal

Currently, a majority of cancer treatment strategies are based on the removal of tumor mass mainly by surgery. Chemical and physical treatments such as chemo- and radiotherapies have also made a major contribution in inhibiting rapid growth of malignant cells. Furthermore, these approaches are often combined to enhance therapeutic indices. It is widely known that surgery, chemo- and radiotherapy also inhibit normal cells growth. In addition, these treatment modalities are associated with severe side effects and high toxicity which in turn lead to low quality of life. This review encompasses novel strategies for more effective chemotherapeutic delivery aiming to generate better prognosis. Currently, cancer treatment is a highly dynamic field and significant advances are being made in the development of novel cancer treatment strategies. In contrast to conventional cancer therapeutics, novel approaches such as ligand or receptor based targeting, triggered release, intracellular drug targeting, gene delivery, cancer stem cell therapy, magnetic drug targeting and ultrasound-mediated drug delivery, have added new modalities for cancer treatment. These approaches have led to selective detection of malignant cells leading to their eradication with minimal side effects. Lowering multi-drug resistance and involving influx transportation in targeted drug delivery to cancer cells can also contribute significantly in the therapeutic interventions in cancer.


Journal of drug delivery | 2014

Tailor-Made Pentablock Copolymer Based Formulation for Sustained Ocular Delivery of Protein Therapeutics

Sulabh Patel; Ravi Vaishya; Gyan P. Mishra; Viral Tamboli; Dhananjay Pal; Ashim K. Mitra

The objective of this research article is to report the synthesis and evaluation of novel pentablock copolymers for controlled delivery of macromolecules in the treatment of posterior segment diseases. Novel biodegradable PB copolymers were synthesized by sequential ring-opening polymerization. Various ratios and molecular weights of each block (polyglycolic acid, polyethylene glycol, polylactic acid, and polycaprolactone) were selected for synthesis and to optimize release profile of FITC-BSA, IgG, and bevacizumab from nanoparticles (NPs) and thermosensitive gel. NPs were characterized for particle size, polydispersity, entrapment efficiency, and drug loading. In vitro release study of proteins from NPs alone and composite formulation (NPs suspended in thermosensitive gel) was performed. Composite formulations demonstrated no or negligible burst release with continuous near zero-order release in contrast to NPs alone. Hydrodynamic diameter of protein therapeutics and hydrophobicity of PB copolymer exhibited significant effect on entrapment efficiency and in vitro release profile. CD spectroscopy confirmed retention of structural conformation of released protein. Biological activity of released bevacizumab was confirmed by in vitro cell proliferation and cell migration assays. It can be concluded that novel PB polymers can serve a platform for sustained delivery of therapeutic proteins.


Journal of Microencapsulation | 2011

Development and characterization of nanoparticulate formulation of a water soluble prodrug of dexamethasone by HIP complexation

Ripal Gaudana; Ashwin Parenky; Ravi Vaishya; Swapan K. Samanta; Ashim K. Mitra

The objective of this study was to develop and characterize a nanoparticulate-based sustained release formulation of a water soluble dipeptide prodrug of dexamethasone, valine–valine-dexamethasone (VVD). Being hydrophilic in nature, it readily leaches out in the external aqueous medium and hence partitions poorly into the polymeric matrix resulting in minimal entrapment in nanoparticles. Hence, hydrophobic ion pairing (HIP) complexation of the prodrug was employed with dextran sulphate as a complexing polymer. A novel, solid in oil in water emulsion method was employed to encapsulate the prodrug in HIP complex form in poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) matrix. Nanoparticles were characterized with respect to size, zeta potential, crystallinity of entrapped drug and surface morphology. A significant enhancement in the entrapment of the prodrug in nanoparticles was achieved. Finally, a simple yet novel method was developed which can also be applicable to encapsulate other charged hydrophilic molecules, such as peptides and proteins.


Protein and Peptide Letters | 2014

Novel Thermosensitive Pentablock Copolymers for Sustained Delivery of Proteins in the Treatment of Posterior Segment Diseases

Sulabh Patel; Ravi Vaishya; Xiaoyan Yang; Dhananjay Pal; Ashim K. Mitra

Biodegradable and injectable in situ thermosensitive hydrogels were investigated for sustained delivery of pro- tein therapeutics in the treatment of ocular posterior segment neovascular diseases. A series of triblock (TB, polycaprolac- tone-polyethylene glycol-polycaprolactone (PCL-PEG-PCL), B-A-B) and pentablock copolymers (PBCs) (polylactic acid (PLA)-PCL-PEG-PCL-PLA (C-B-A-B-C) and PEG-PCL-PLA-PCL-PEG (A-B-C-B-A)) were synthesized and evaluated for their thermosensitive behavior. Effects of molecular weight, hydr ophobicity and block arrangement on polymer crys-tallinity, sol-gel transition, micelle size, viscosity and in vitro drug release were examined. Results from sol-gel transition studies demonstrated that aqueous solutions of block copolymers can immediately transform to hydrogel upon exposure to physiological temperature. PBC provide significantly longer sustained release (more than 20 days) of IgG relative to TB copolymers. Moreover, kinematic viscosity of aqueous solution at 25°C for A-B-C-B-A type of PBCs was noticeably lower than the TB (B-A-B) copolymers and other PBCs with C-B-A-B-C block arrangements suggesting desired syringe- ability. The presence of PLA blocks in PBCs (C-B-A-B-C and A-B-C-B-A) significantly reduces crystallinity. Hence, it is anticipated that PBCs will have a faster rate of degradation relative to PCL-PEG-PCL based TB c opolyme rs. PBCs also exhibited excellent cell viability and biocompatibility on ARPE-19 (human retinal pigment epithelial cell line) and RAW- 264.7 (mouse macrophage cells), likely rendering it safe for ocular applications. Owing to biodegradability, thermosensi- tivity, ease of handling and biocompatibility PBC hydrogels can be considered as promising biomaterial for sustained de- livery of protein therapeutics to the back of the eye.


Aaps Pharmscitech | 2015

Novel Pentablock Copolymer-Based Nanoparticulate Systems for Sustained Protein Delivery

Sulabh Patel; Ravi Vaishya; Dhananjay Pal; Ashim K. Mitra

The design, synthesis, and application of novel biodegradable and biocompatible pentablock (PB) copolymers, i.e., polyglycolic acid-polycaprolactone-polyethylene glycol-polycaprolactone-polyglycolic acid (PGA-PCL-PEG-PCL-PGA) and polylactic acid-polycaprolactone-polyethylene glycol-polycaprolactone-polylactic acid (PLA-PCL-PEG-PCL-PLA) for sustained protein delivery, are reported. The PB copolymers can be engineered to generate sustained delivery of protein therapeutics to the posterior segment of the eye. PB copolymers with different block arrangements and molecular weights were synthesized by ring-opening polymerization and characterized by proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H-NMR), gel permeation chromatography (GPC), and X-ray diffraction (XRD) spectroscopy. Immunoglobulin G (IgG) was selected as a model protein due to its structural similarity to bevacizumab. The influence of polymer molecular weight, composition, and isomerism on formulation parameters such as entrapment efficiency, drug loading, and in vitro release profile was delineated. Crystallinity and molecular weight of copolymers exhibited a substantial effect on formulation parameters. A secondary structure of released IgG was confirmed by circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy. In vitro cytotoxicity, cell viability, and biocompatibility studies performed on human retinal pigment epithelial cells (ARPE-19) and/or macrophage cell line (RAW 264.7) demonstrated PB copolymers to be excellent biomaterials. Novel PB polymers may be the answer to the unmet need of a sustained release protein formulation.


Journal of Microencapsulation | 2016

Optimization of novel pentablock copolymer based composite formulation for sustained delivery of peptide/protein in the treatment of ocular diseases

Sulabh Patel; Ravi Vaishya; Ashaben Patel; Vibhuti Agrahari; Dhananjay Pal; Ashim K. Mitra

Abstract This manuscript is focussed on the development of pentablock (PB) copolymer based sustained release formulation for the treatment of posterior segment ocular diseases. We have successfully synthesised biodegradable and biocompatible PB copolymers for the preparation of nanoparticles (NPs) and thermosensitive gel. Achieving high drug loading with hydrophilic biotherapeutics (peptides/proteins) is a challenging task. Moreover, small intravitreal injection volume (≤100 μL) requires high loading to develop a long term (six months) sustained release formulation. We have successfully investigated various formulation parameters to achieve maximum peptide/protein (octreotide, insulin, lysozyme, IgG-Fab, IgG, and catalase) loading in PB NPs. Improvement in drug loading can facilitate delivery of larger doses of therapeutic proteins via limited injection volume. A composite formulation comprised of NPs in gel system exhibited sustained release (without burst effect) of peptides and proteins, may serve as a platform technology for the treatment of posterior segment ocular diseases.


International Journal of Pharmaceutics | 2015

Reversible hydrophobic ion-paring complex strategy to minimize acylation of octreotide during long-term delivery from PLGA microparticles.

Ravi Vaishya; Abhirup Mandal; Mitan R. Gokulgandhi; Sulabh Patel; Ashim K. Mitra

Acylation of peptide has been reported for a number of peptides and proteins during release from polymers comprising of lactide and glycolide. We hypothesize that reversible hydrophobic ion-pairing (HIP) complex may minimize octreotide acylation during release. Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), dextran sulfate A (DSA, Mw 9-20 kDa) and dextran sulfate B (DSB, Mw 36-50 kDa) were selected as ion-pairing agents to prepare reversible HIP complex with octreotide. Complexation efficiency was optimized with respect to the mole ratio of ion-pairing agent to octreotide to achieve 100% complexation of octreotide. Dissociation studies suggested that DSA-octreotide and DSB-octreotide complexes dissociate completely at physiological pH in presence of counter ions unlike SDS-octreotide complex. DSA-octreotide and DSB-octreotide complex encapsulated PLGA microparticles (DSAMPs and DSBMPs) were prepared using the S/O/W emulsion method. Entrapment efficiencies for DSAMPs and DSBMPs were 74.7±8.4% and 81.7±6.3%, respectively. In vitro release of octreotide was performed by suspending MPs in gel. A large fraction of peptide was released in chemically intact form and <7% was acylated from DSAMPs and DSBMPs in gel over 55 days. Therefore, HIP complexation could be a viable strategy to minimize acylation of peptides and proteins during extended release from lactide and glycolide based polymers.

Collaboration


Dive into the Ravi Vaishya's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ashim K. Mitra

University of Missouri–Kansas City

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sulabh Patel

University of Missouri–Kansas City

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dhananjay Pal

University of Missouri–Kansas City

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jwala Jwala

University of Missouri–Kansas City

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Varun Khurana

University of Missouri–Kansas City

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Vibhuti Agrahari

University of Missouri–Kansas City

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Abhirup Mandal

University of Missouri–Kansas City

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mitan R. Gokulgandhi

University of Missouri–Kansas City

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ripal Gaudana

University of Missouri–Kansas City

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Chandramouli Natarajan

University of Missouri–Kansas City

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge