Affiliation:
1. SVKM's NMIMS, Shobhaben Pratapbhai Patel School of Pharmacy & Technology Management, Mumbai, India
Abstract
Skin being the largest external organ, offers an appealing procedure for transdermal drug delivery, so
the drug needs to reach above the outermost layer of the skin, i.e., stratum corneum. Small molecular drug entities
obeying the Lipinski rule, i.e., drugs having a molecular weight less than 500 Da, high lipophilicity, and
optimum polarity, are favored enough to be used on the skin as therapeutics. Skin's barrier properties prevent
the transport of macromolecules at pre-determined therapeutic rates. Notable advancements in macromolecules'
transdermal delivery have occurred in recent years. Scientists have opted for liposomes, the use of electroporation,
low-frequency ultrasound techniques, etc. Some of these have shown better delivery of macromolecules
at clinically beneficial rates. These physical technologies involve complex mechanisms, which may irreversibly
incur skin damage. Majorly, two types of lipid-based formulations, including Solid Lipid Nanoparticles
(SLNs) and Nanostructured Lipid Carriers (NLCs), are widely investigated as transdermal delivery systems. In
this review, the concepts, mechanisms, and applications of nanostructured lipid carriers used to transport macromolecules
via transdermal routes are thoroughly reviewed and presented along with their clinical perspective.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Drug Discovery,Pharmacology
Cited by
8 articles.
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