Mechanisms by Which Liposomes Improve Inhaled Drug Delivery for Alveolar Diseases

Author:

Ferguson Laura T.1ORCID,Ma Xiaonan1,Myerson Jacob W.2,Wu Jichuan1,Glassman Patrick M.2,Zamora Marco E.3,Hood Elizabeth D.2,Zaleski Michael2,Shen Mengwen45,Essien Eno-Obong1,Shuvaev Vladimir V.2,Brenner Jacob S.126ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care Division Perelman School of Medicine University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA 19104 USA

2. Department of Systems Pharmacology and Translational Therapeutics Perelman School of Medicine University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA 19104 USA

3. School of Biomedical Engineering, Science, and Health Systems Drexel University Philadelphia PA 19104 USA

4. Emergency Medicine Department Yueyang Hospital of Integrated Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine 200437 Shanghai China

5. Department of Microbiology Perelman School of Medicine University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA 19104 USA

6. Penn-CHOP Lung Biology Institute Perelman School of Medicine University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA 19104 USA

Abstract

Diseases of the pulmonary alveolus, such as pulmonary fibrosis, are leading causes of morbidity and mortality, but exceedingly few drugs are developed for them. A major reason for this gap is that after inhalation, drugs are quickly whisked away from alveoli due to their high perfusion. To solve this problem, the mechanisms by which nano‐scale drug carriers dramatically improve lung pharmacokinetics using an inhalable liposome formulation containing nintedanib, an antifibrotic for pulmonary fibrosis, are studied. Direct instillation of liposomes in murine lung increases nintedanib's total lung delivery over time by 8000‐fold and lung half life by tenfold, compared to oral nintedanib. Counterintuitively, it is shown that pulmonary surfactant neither lyses nor aggregates the liposomes. Instead, each lung compartment (alveolar fluid, alveolar leukocytes, and parenchyma) elutes liposomes over 24 h, likely serving as “drug depots.” After deposition in the surfactant layer, liposomes are transferred over 3–6 h to alveolar leukocytes (which take up a surprisingly minor 1–5% of total lung dose instilled) in a nonsaturable fashion. Further, all cell layers of the lung parenchyma take up liposomes. These and other mechanisms elucidated here should guide engineering of future inhaled nanomedicine for alveolar diseases.

Funder

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

Boehringer Ingelheim

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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