Transdermal Iontophoretic Delivery of Vapreotide Acetate AcrossPorcine Skin in Vitro

Schuetz, Yannic ; Naik, Aarti ; Guy, Richard ; Vuaridel, Evelyne ; Kalia, Yogeshvar

In: Pharmaceutical Research, 2005, vol. 22, no. 8, p. 1305-1312

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    Summary
    Purpose: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of delivering vapreotide, a somatostatin analogue, by transdermal iontophoresis. Methods: In vitro experiments were conducted using dermatomed porcine ear skin and heat-separated epidermis. In addition to quantifying vapreotide transport into and across the skin, the effect of peptide delivery on skin permselectivity was also measured. The influence of (1) current density, (2) pre- and post-treatment of the skin, (3) competitive ions, and (4) inclusion of albumin in the receptor on vapreotide delivery were investigated. Results: Epidermis proved to be a better model than dermatomed skin for vapreotide transport studies. Despite the susceptibility of vapreotide to enzymatic degradation, a flux of 1.7μg/cm2 per hour was achieved after 7h of constant current iontophoresis (0.15mA/cm2). Post-iontophoretic extraction revealed that, depending on the experimental conditions, 80-300μg of peptide were bound to the skin. Vapreotide was found to interact with the skin and displayed a current-dependent inhibition of electroosmosis. However, neither the pre-treatment strategies to saturate the putative binding sites nor the post-treatment protocols to displace the bound peptide were effective. Conclusion: Based on the observed transport rate of vapreotide across porcine epidermis and its clinical pharmacokinetics, therapeutic concentrations should be achievable using a 15-cm2 patch