Formulation And Evaluation of Controlled Release Bromfenac Sodium Ocular Insert

Swathy Govindaswamy, R. Rampriya, Fatima S Saffrin, A. Siranjeevi, Viswanathan Ramachandran, M. Sudharsan
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Abstract

According to the World Health Organization, cataract operations are performed on one million people per year [1]. After cataract surgery, however, most patients still experience physiologically severe postoperative ocular inflammation. Uncontrolled intraocular inflammation causes discomfort, delayed recovery, poor visual results, and even more severe problems such as cystoid macular oedema and synechiae due to inflammatory cells and cytokines entering the aqueous humour. Topical non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are commonly used to treat non-infectious ocular inflammation after ophthalmic surgery. As a result, NSAIDs appear to be potentially useful drugs for cataract surgery. [2] The U.S Food and Drug Administration has approved four ophthalmic NSAIDs to treat postoperative ocular inflammation followed by cataract surgery: bromfenac sodium, diclofenac sodium, Ketorolac tromethamine, and nepafenac.[3] The first approved NSAID for treating anterior chamber inflammation during cataract surgical treatment is bromfenac ophthalmic solution. Bromfenac is a more potent drug than other drugs for treating ocular inflammation. [4] The drug-loaded eye drop is easy to use. However, it has the inherent disadvantage that most medication is almost immediately diluted away in the tear film when the eye drops are introduced into the cul-de-sac and quickly exhausted from the precorneal cavity's constant tear flow. This process occurs more intensively in swollen eyes than in normal eyes and lachrymal-nasal drainage. [5,6] To avoid the previously stated side effects and increase the drug's effectiveness, a novel approach of an ocular insert that increases the drug's contact time in the eye should be chosen, thus improving patient compliance by increasing bioavailability and reducing frequent administration. [7] Ophthalmic inserts are skinny discs of polymeric substances that fit into the upper or lower conjunctiva sac. They have compensations over the conventional dosage forms and possess amplified ocular residence, discharge the drugs at a slow and consistent momentum, are capable of delivering precise dosing, lack preservatives, have augmented shelf life, and reduced systemic incorporation. [8] Our research intended to fabricate bromfenac sodium ocular inserts to amplify the contact time and offer a controlled release model that could advance patient compliance, cut dosing frequency, and attain superior curative usefulness.
控释溴芬酸钠眼用注射剂的处方及评价
据世界卫生组织统计,每年有100万人接受白内障手术。然而,在白内障手术后,大多数患者仍然会经历生理性严重的术后眼部炎症。不受控制的眼内炎症会导致不适、恢复延迟、视力差,甚至更严重的问题,如炎性细胞和细胞因子进入房水导致的囊样黄斑水肿和粘连。局部非甾体抗炎药(NSAIDs)通常用于治疗眼科手术后的非感染性眼部炎症。因此,非甾体抗炎药似乎是白内障手术中潜在的有用药物。美国食品和药物管理局已经批准了四种眼科非甾体抗炎药用于治疗白内障手术后的术后眼部炎症:溴芬酸钠、双氯芬酸钠、酮咯酸tromethamine和neafenac第一个被批准用于治疗白内障手术中前房炎症的非甾体抗炎药是溴芬酸眼液。溴芬酸是一种比其他治疗眼部炎症的药物更有效的药物。这种含药滴眼液使用方便。然而,它有一个固有的缺点,那就是当滴眼液进入眼袋时,大多数药物几乎立即在泪膜中被稀释掉,并迅速从角膜前腔的持续泪液流中耗尽。这个过程发生在肿胀的眼睛比正常的眼睛和泪鼻引流更强烈。[5,6]为了避免前面提到的副作用并提高药物的有效性,应该选择一种新的眼内植入方法,增加药物在眼睛中的接触时间,从而通过提高生物利用度和减少给药频率来提高患者的依从性。眼内植入物是由聚合物质制成的薄圆盘,可植入上或下结膜囊。与传统剂型相比,它们具有补偿作用,具有放大的眼内停留,以缓慢而一致的动量排出药物,能够提供精确的剂量,缺乏防腐剂,延长保质期,减少全身掺入。我们的研究旨在制造溴芬酸钠眼植入物,以延长接触时间,并提供可控释放模型,从而提高患者的依从性,减少给药频率,并获得更好的治疗效果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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