This study tests the hypothesis that association complexes formed between enoxaparin and cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) augment permeation across the gastrointestional mucosa due to improved encapsulation of this hydrophilic macromolecule within biocompatible poly (lactide-co-glycolide, PLGA RG 503) nanoparticles. When compared to free enoxaparin, association with CTAB increased drug encapsulation efficiency within PLGA nanoparticles from 40.3 ± 3.4% to 99.1 ± 1.0%. Drug-release from enoxaparin/CTAB PLGA
nanoparticles was assessed in HBSS, pH 7.4 and in FASSIFV2, pH 6.5, suggesting effective protection of PLGA-encapsulated enoxaparin from unfavorable intestinal conditions. Stability of enoxaparin/CTAB ion pair complex was pH-dependent, resulting in more rapid dissociation under simulated plasma conditions (i.e., pH 7.4) than in the presence of a mild acidic gastrointestinal environment (i.e., pH
6.5). Intestinal flux of enoxaparin complexes across in vitro Caco-2 cell monolayers was greater when encapsulated within PLGA nanoparticles. Limited changes in transepithelial transport of PLGA-encapsulated enoxaparin complexes in the presence of increasing CTAB concentrations suggests significant contribution of size-dependent passive diffusion as the predominant transport mechanism facilitating intestinal absorption.
Research Department	
              
          Research Journal	
              ِِِAmerican Association of Pharmaceutical Sciences (AAPS PharmSciTech), DOI: 10.1208/s12249-020-1618-2 
          Research Publisher	
              Springer
          Research Rank	
              1
          Research Vol	
              Vol. 21, Article 88
          Research Website	
              NULL
          Research Year	
              2020
          Research Member	
          
      Research Abstract	
               
 
 
          