In vitro evaluation of transdermal nicotine delivery systems commercially available in Brazil

Authors

  • André Luís Morais Ruela Federal University of Alfenas; Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences; Department of Pharmacy
  • Eduardo Costa Figueiredo Federal University of Alfenas; Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences; Department of Pharmacy
  • Aline Gravinez Perissinato Federal University of Alfenas; Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences; Department of Pharmacy
  • Ana Carolina Zogbi Lima Federal University of Alfenas; Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences; Department of Pharmacy
  • Magali Benjamim Araújo Federal University of Alfenas; Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences; Department of Pharmacy
  • Gislaine Ribeiro Pereira Federal University of Alfenas; Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences; Department of Pharmacy

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1984-82502013000300020

Keywords:

Nicotine^i1^srelease and skin permeat, Transdermal delivery patches^i1^sevaluat, Vertical diffusion cell, Skin permeation, Transdermal formulations^i1^snicotine delivery syst

Abstract

The aim of this study was to develop and validate a method for evaluating the release and skin permeation from transdermal nicotine patches using the vertical diffusion cell (VDC). The VDC is an experimental apparatus employed in research, development, and the pharmaceutical field because it can simulate conditions closest to those established in clinical trials. Two transdermal nicotine delivery systems marketed in Brazil to release 14 mg over 24 hours were evaluated. Release studies were carried out using a regenerated cellulose dialysis membrane and permeation studies were carried out using excised porcine ear skin. The results indicated that nicotine release from both evaluated patches follows Higuchi's release kinetics, while skin permeation studies indicated zero-order release kinetics. Nicotine release rates were different between both evaluated patches, but drug permeation rates were not significantly different. According to validation studies, the method was appropriate for evaluating in vitro performance of nicotine patches. The proposed method can be applied to in vitro comparative studies between different commercial nicotine patches and may be used as an auxiliary tool in the design of new transdermal nicotine delivery systems.

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Published

2013-09-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

In vitro evaluation of transdermal nicotine delivery systems commercially available in Brazil . (2013). Brazilian Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 49(3), 579-588. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1984-82502013000300020