The development of a melt-extruded shellac carrier for the targeted delivery of probiotics to the colon.
Abstract
Hot melt extrusion (HME) is considered an efficient technique in developing solid molecular
dispersions, and has been demonstrated to provide sustained, modified and targeted drug delivery
resulting in improved bioavailability. However, most commercial enteric or pH-responsive polymers
are relatively difficult to process or have high Glass Transition Temperature (Tg) values, making their
use with temperature-sensitive drugs, probiotics or biologics not viable. Shellac is a natural
thermoplastic, and after a review of current literature on the pharmaceutical HME process, a possible
gap in the knowledge of the use of shellac to produce dosage forms by means of HME was identified.
This work explores the possibility of SSB® 55 pharmaceutical-grade shellac as a melt-extrudable
encapsulation polymer to entrap freeze-dried probiotic powder and to determine bacterial cell
viability post-processing. Well-defined strands were produced from the physical mixture of shellac
and Biocare® Bifidobacterium Probiotic. FTIR clarified that there are no significant interactions
between the probiotic and polymer. All of the samples demonstrated less than 5% degradation over
24 h at pH of both 1.2 and 6.8. At pH 7.4, both loaded samples gave a similar dissolution trend with
complete degradation achieved after 10–11 h. Following five-month storage, 57.8% reduction in viability was observed.
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