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Scope and Limitations of The Co-Drug Approach to Topical Drug Delivery

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Lau, W.-M., White, A.W., Gallagher, S.J., Donaldson, M., McNaughton, G. and Heard, C.M. (2008) Scope and Limitations of The Co-Drug Approach to Topical Drug Delivery. Current Pharmaceutical Design, 14 (8). pp. 794-802. ISSN 1381-6128 doi: 10.2174/138161208784007653

Abstract/Summary

Many currently available drugs show unfavourable physicochemical properties for delivery into or across the skin and temporary chemical modulation of the penetrant is one option to achieve improved delivery properties. Pro-drugs are chemical derivatives of an active drug which is covalently bonded to an inactive pro-moiety in order to overcome pharmaceutical and pharmacokinetic barriers. A pro-drug relies upon conversion within the body to release the parent active drug (and pro-moiety) to elicit its pharmacological effect. The main drawback of this approach is that the pro-moiety is essentially an unwanted ballast which, when released, can lead to adverse effects. The term ‘co-drug’ refers to two or more therapeutic compounds active against the same disease bonded via a covalent chemical linkage and it is this approach which is reviewed for the first time in the current article. For topically applied co-drugs, each moiety is liberated in situ, either chemically or enzymatically, once the stratum corneum barrier has been overcome by the co-drug. Advantages include synergistic modulation of the disease process, enhancement of drug delivery and pharmacokinetic properties and the potential to enhance stability by masking of labile functional groups. The amount of published work on co-drugs is limited but the available data suggest the co-drug concept could provide a significant therapeutic improvement in dermatological diseases. However, the applicability of the co-drug approach is subject to strict limitations pertaining mainly to the availability of compatible moieties and physicochemical properties of the overall molecule.

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Item Type Article
URI https://reading-clone.eprints-hosting.org/id/eprint/4397
Item Type Article
Refereed Yes
Divisions No Reading authors. Back catalogue items
Uncontrolled Keywords Co-drug; pro-drug; combination therapy; skin; dermal drug delivery; transdermal drug delivery; drug design
Publisher Bentham Science Publishers Ltd
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