|
Pharma Voice
Multi-component drug delivery system: An emerging trend
Swarnlata Saraf and K Dashora give an overview
of multi-component therapy, which is a way of increasing drug efficacy when
a single drug fails
The concept of multi-component therapy is beneficial when the selected agents
possess differing mechanisms of action that provide additive or synergistic
efficacy. It reduces the required doses of individual agents compared with mono-therapy
and limits side effects. Multi-component therapy may seem costlier than mono-therapy
in the short term, but has significant savings, like lesser treatment failure
rate, reduced case-fatality ratios, slower development of resistance, and consequently,
less drug development costs. There are three general categories of multi-component
therapy.
|
Multi-component therapy is now in demand for its development
regarding formulations as well as dosage designing
|
First category includes individual components like analgesic
with antipyretic and beta-blocker with diuretic. The second category is to ameliorate
the unwanted pharmacodynamic effects of the active agents like anti-cholinergic
with narcotic. The third category includes combinations that improve pharmacokinetic
properties like co-administration of levodopa and decarboxylase inhibitor which
reduces the dopamine formation in GIT and outside CNS. Multi-component therapy
is now in demand for its development regarding formulations as well as dosage
designing. It has been proved for its effectiveness, affordability and acceptability
of dosage regime for a variety of diseases like malaria, joint disorders, pain,
hypertension and tuberculosis.
Malaria
It is estimated that 90 percent of global malaria mortality occurs in sub-Saharan
Africa. The resistance to chloroquine has brought the efforts to control malaria
in the region to a stand still. The resistance was first recorded in 1979 in
East Africa, but has now been reported from almost all malaria endemic countries
of Africa. Sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) was seen as the obvious successor
to chloroquine. However, resistance to SP is developing quickly, thus reducing
the therapeutic life of this drug. Artemisinin-based combination therapies have
shown to improve treatment efficacy and also contain drug resistance in South-East
Asia.
Combination therapy (CT) with anti-malarial drugs is the simultaneous use of
two or more blood schizontocidal drugs with independent modes of action and
different biochemical targets in the parasite. In the context of this definition,
multiple-drug therapies that include a non-anti-malarial drug to enhance the
anti-malarial effect of a blood schizontocidal drug are not considered combination
therapy. Similarly, certain anti-malarial drugs that fit the criteria of synergistic
fixed-dose combinations are operationally considered as single products. Neither
of the individual components would be given alone for anti-malarial therapy
as in the case of sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine.
Arthritis
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic and potentially crippling inflammatory
disorder, which progressively wears away the bone and cartilage. Joint erosions
are routinely seen within six months of RA's onset and occur rapidly, in the
course of the disease. Moderate disability within two years of diagnosis is
not uncommon. While conventional DMARD (disease-modifying antirheu-matic drug)
therapies have been shown to slow joint destruction, they are powerless to stop
RA's progression or reverse joint damage. In addition to early treatment, combination
treatment with DMARDs, as well as, with biologic agents, has been shown to yield
more favourable outcomes than a single treatment. The January 2006 issue of
Arthritis & Rheumatism presents the first study to compare the effectiveness
of DMARD therapy alone, anti-TNF (tumour necrosis factor) therapy alone and
a combination of DMARD and anti-TNF therapy. The compelling results affirm the
long-term benefits of early combination therapy for women and men afflicted
with aggressive RA.
Pain
Pain of multiple etiologies remains a substantial problem for many patients.
Improved pain relief can be demonstrated by multi-modal analgesic combinations.
Substantial evidence supports combining analgesics for the management of pain
and, in some instances, they have a heterogenous pharmacologic sparing effect.
Fixed-dose combination analgesics with demonstrated efficacy and safety are
widely useful for pain management. However, studies have to be done to explore
the specific analgesics at specific doses that can be combined with a coanalgesic
in a patient-specific manner to achieve additive, if not synergistic, multimodal
pain relief with the fewest possible adverse consequences.
Hypertension
The first-line therapy for hypertension remains a betablocker or diuretic, given
in a low dosage. A target blood pressure of less than 140/90 mm Hg is achieved
in about 50 percent of patients treated with monotherapy; two or more agents
from different pharmacological classes are often needed to achieve adequate
blood pressure control. Single-dose combination anti-hypertension therapy is
an important option that combines efficacy of blood pressure reduction and a
low side effect profile with convenient once-daily dosing to enhance compliance.
Combination anti-hypertensives include combined agents from the following pharmacological
classes: diuretics and potassium-sparing diuretics, beta blockers and diuretics,
angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and diuretics, angiotensin-II
antagonists and diuretics, and calcium channel blockers and ACE inhibitors.
AIDS
Combination anti-HIV therapy is now the standard of care for people with HIV.
It is sometimes called HAART (Highly Active Anti-Retroviral Therapy). There
are now 17 anti-HIV drugs available by prescription. These anti-HIV drugs fall
into three main categories:
- Nucleoside/tide Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors
(NRTIs), which include abacavir (Ziagen), lamivudine, 3TC (Epivir), tenofovir
(Viread), abacavir/lamivudine /zidovudine (Trizivir), lamivudine/zidovudine
(Combivir), stavudine, d4T (Zerit), didanosine, ddI (Videx, Videx EC), zalcitabine,
ddC (HIVID), and zidovudine, AZT (Retrovir).
- Protease Inhibitors (PIs), which include amprenavir
(Agenerase), nelfinavir (Viracept), saquinavir (Fortavase), indinavir (Crixivan),
ritonavir (Norvir), saquinavir (Invirase), and lopinavir/ritonavir (Kaletra).
- Non-nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors
(NnRTIs), which include delavirdine (Rescriptor), efavirenz (Sustiva),
and nevirapine (Viramune).
|
Studies show that three drug combinations of anti-HIV
drugs are much more effective than one drug used alone
|
Studies clearly show that three drug combinations of these
anti-HIV drugs are much more effective than one drug used alone or two-drug
combinations in preventing disease progression and death. Numerous studies of
triple drug combinations using either a PI or a NnRTI with two NRTI anti-HIV
drugs, showed that the triple combination could greatly reduce disease progression
and deaths in people with AIDS.
The name now commonly given to combinations of anti-HIV drugs is HAART. Recommendations
from the National Institutes for Health and the Public Health Service state
that the goal of anti-HIV treatment is to keep the level of HIV in the body
as low as possible, for a relatively longer time. The best combination of anti-HIV
treatments is not yet known for certain.
What the future holds
The future will also see the increasing application of multi-component therapy
as a front-line defence against the disease, aiming at long-term corrective
treatment through the designing of multi-component, novel, drug delivery system.
During design of these formulations, several factors have to be considered,
like careful pharmacokinetic parameters for dosage regimen to achieve a desired
therapeutic efficacy of drug in the body. Thus, designing of such proper dosing
services will minimises the drug toxicity, reduces the overdosing or drug complications,
keep health care at minimum cost and ultimately increase the patient compliance.
(The writers are the faculty of Institute of Pharmacy, Pt
Ravishankar Shukla University)
|