1. Introduction
Recently, cancer has become a common disease, and it can lead to death. It has also affected life expectancy according to the disease level in most developed countries in this century [
1,
2].
Current therapies for cancer disease include chemotherapy, radiotherapy and surgery. Among them, surgery is an invasive method that can be used in some cases. The techniques of chemotherapy and radiotherapy show multidrug resistance and severe adverse effects in patients. These effects may decrease the achievement of treatment as well as reducing patient compliance. Nanotechnological products have great potential for the delivery of numerous anti-cancer agents. They have demonstrated benefits over traditional chemotherapy [
3].
Imatinib (IMT) is a tyrosine kinase enzyme inhibitor and is effective in the treatment of gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) [
4,
5]. It has some undesired adverse effects such as cardiac, pulmonary and hepatic toxicity [
6]. The benefits associated with the particular properties of nanostructured lipid carrier systems (NLCSs) include tumor-specific drug deposition, efficient pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics on account of the therapeutic agent, enhanced internalization and intracellular transport and decreased biodistribution, resulting in the mitigation of the harmful consequences of anti-tumor treatments.
NLCSs are the second generation of lipid nanoparticles and have the ability to enable the insertion of a liquid lipid into a solid lipid matrix. This forms a space in the crystal lattice. As a result, the drug molecule has a better accommodation in the NLCSs. In addition, these systems improve the drug loading capacity, reduce drug expulsion during storage, provide high drug encapsulation efficiency and cope with the drawback of drug expulsion from the lipid phase [
7,
8,
9].
The potential usage of NLCSs to deliver anticancer drugs via oral, intravenous, pulmonary and intraperitoneal routes of administration has been expressed in several studies [
10,
11,
12]. Herein, IMT-loaded NLCSs were produced by using emulsification and sonication methods—procedures that have relatively low costs and exclude any use of organic solvents, and, in this case, all the components are GRAS (generally recognized as safe). Different types of surfactants, solid and liquid lipids and solvents were studied to obtain stable formulations. Furthermore, preparation conditions such as the stirring rate and time and sonication were evaluated. The developed formulation was observed in terms of particle size, PDI and zeta potential measurements, thermal analysis, entrapment efficiency, loading capacity, microbiological analysis, syringeability study, stability and in vitro release studies. In addition, cellular uptake and cytotoxicity studies of NLCSs containing IMT were performed by using CRL-1739 cells.
4. Discussion
NLCSs are lipid-based nano drug carrier systems and they comprise liquid lipid, solid lipid, surfactants and aqueous phases. In this study, many formulation contents were tested during the NLCSs preparation procedure, and some formulations were eliminated because of phase separation and creamy formation. F16-IMT was selected as an ideal formulation according to its good characterization and stability results. This formulation comprised compritol 888, oleic acid, lipoid S 75 and a water:acetone:ethanol mixture. Oleic acid and compritol 888 were used as liquid and solid lipids, respectively. Lipoid S 75 leads to the good emulsification of the lipid mixture and provides stabilization of NLCS. Hydrophilic solvents such as water, ethanol, propanol, butanol, pentanol and hexanol are used as the aqueous phase. The rapid distribution of the lipid phase into the aqueous phase is obtained by its critical behavior in NLCS formation [
25,
26,
27]. Furthermore, their low toxicity, owing to the higher solubilizing capacity, reduced surface tension and facilitation of forming properties, is helpful to prepare NLCSs with small particle sizes [
28,
29]. The preparation of NLCSs was achieved by using the emulsification–sonication method. The facilitation of the production process, short production time, homogeneous and desired particle size and the obtaining of a stable formulation were carried out thanks to this method [
14,
15,
29,
30,
31].
Gupta et al. [
32] prepared imatinib-loaded nanostructured lipid carriers (IMT-NLC) by the hot homogenization method. While their formulations contain Precirol ATO 5, Tween
® 20, Labrafil M 1944 CS and lecithin, our formulations include compritol 888, oleic acid, lipoid S 75 and a water:acetone:ethanol mixture. In addition, Gupta et al. [
32] encountered difficulties in the application of temperature during the preparation process because of the protein structure of IMT. The F16-IMT developed herein is prepared by emulsification and sonication methods, and these methods eliminate the difficulty of hot homogenization.
The characterization of formulations was performed in terms of particle size, PDI and zeta potential values. Particle size, zeta potential and PDI are significant parameters for the characterization of NLCSs and are effective in the interaction of formulations with the biological system [
33]. The desired particle size, zeta potential and PDI values were achieved by 500 W and 20 kHz for between 5–15 min at 5000–10,000 rpm. In the presence of a surfactant, a high zeta potential value, small particle size and desired PDI value were accomplished during the preparation process and stability studies. In some studies, the results revealed that nano carrier drug delivery systems with particle sizes of 300 nm and below 300 nm are more suitable for pharmaceutical applications because they are recognized by erythrocytes and other cells and maintained higher drug release properties compared to nano carrier drug delivery systems with large sized particles [
33,
34]. The particle sizes of all NLCSs were found to be below 300 nm and available for pharmaceutical administration according to the literature [
35,
36]. In this study, high and negative zeta potential values were obtained due to usage of the surfactant concentration in the preparation process. The PDI values of the all formulations were below 0.5, which is indicative of monodispersed formulations, with uniform diameters of nanoparticle populations [
25,
29,
30,
37]. While some formulations have a PDI value below 0.5, the others do not meet this requirement. These PDI values below 0.5 also suggest a uniform functionalization process.
IMT is a tyrosine kinase enzyme inhibitor with a specific affinity for Bcr-Abl, PDGFR and c-Kit. It has been shown to be highly effective in the treatment of GIST, characterized by the over-expression of Bcr-Abl. In total, 400 mg/day of IMT is used in conventional therapy. However, it has low aqueous solubility, an insufficient pharmacokinetic profile and undesired cardiotoxic effect [
34]. NLCSs also allow the encapsulation of the drug, with the capability to increase its aqueous solubility. The circulation time greatly improves its potential chemo-therapeutic effect. NLCSs are samples of the carrier system and capable of enhancing the solubility, permeability, cellular uptake and bioavailability of encapsulated drugs. Based on these considerations, and as targeted in the study, F16-IMT was prepared by using a smaller amount of IMT (1 mg of IMT) than the amount of IMT in commercial formulation. The characterization of NLCSs containing IMT was performed in terms of particle size, zeta potential and PDI values. As mentioned in previous studies, a narrow size distribution proves that Ostwald ripening can also be seen in the formulations [
38,
39]. Gupta et al. [
32] obtained that IMT-NLC exhibited a particle size of 148.80 ± 1.37 nm, PDI of 0.191 ± 0.017 and of zeta potential of −23.0 ± 1.5 mV. The differences between the characterization parameter values are caused by variations in formulation contents.
The zeta potential demonstrates the net electrostatic charge on the particle surface and is a crucial factor to evaluate the stability of colloidal systems. Particles with negative or positive zeta potential values give information about the stability of NLCSs [
26,
36,
40,
41]. According to the zeta potential results, F16-IMT had negative zeta potential values and saved the values during storage conditions.
The EE and LC of drug formulations are important properties to achieve the accurate administration of the drug delivery system. Obtaining desired values for EE and LC prevents dose-dependent side effects, and thus patient compliance is improved [
30,
32]. In this study, high EE and LC values were obtained for developed NLCSs that contained a lower IMT amount than commercial formulation (
Table 6).
A stability study is necessary to show the physicochemical characteristics of formulations and that they are maintained over time, since the degradation of NLCSs could influence their potential as effective drug delivery systems [
42]. The obtained results exhibited that the appearance and characterization parameters of the formulations did not change during the stability study (
Figure 5).
The formulations were monitored for 30-day storage at 4 °C, 25 °C (RH 60%) and 40 °C (RH 75%) as recommended by the ICH guideline, considering the particle size and PDI (
Table 4). The particle size values for some formulations (F9, F15, F16, F19, F20, F21) were shown to be in accordance with former results (
Table 3) and confirmed the reproducibility of the preparation procedure. The other formulations showing negative values (−) were removed because of their particle size and PDI variation and phase separation or the agglomeration of the NLCS particles.
According to the literature, a high amount of drug delivery was achieved using lipid-based formulations with particle sizes of 120–300 nm. Therefore, NLCSs were found to be appropriate for carrying the drugs to the desired site thanks to their particle sizes. The value of PDI is an indicator of the homogeneity of particle size distribution in a lipid-based dispersion, and it is under 0.5 in the monodisperse formulations [
42,
43,
44,
45,
46]. The size distribution of all formulations might be defined as broad due to their PDI values, which are higher than 0.2. Hence, the developed NLCSs were found to be polydisperse samples.
NLCSs have an amorphous structure in their matrix. This structure allows a larger amount of drug to be encapsulated compared to other lipid-based systems [
46,
47]. Herein, a high IMT entrapment efficiency was observed in the developed formulation (F16-IMT) (
Table 7). This provides clear evidence for the greater drug encapsulation tendency of NLCSs [
47,
48,
49,
50]. In addition, the results demonstrate that the composition of the developed formulation is suitable for the delivery of IMT.
The IMT release profiles of NLCSs were evaluated in different media (
Figure 6,
Figure 7 and
Figure 8). In NLCSs formulations, the lipid matrix can erode slowly, and entrapped drugs remain inside the core of the NLCs and present prolonged release [
46]. According to in vitro release study results, prolonged release was observed for some formulations. In addition, the amount of surfactant affected the release of IMT from NLCSs. When the surfactant concentration is increased, drug release increased. This may be related to the surfactant-induced increase in drug solubility in the aqueous phase, which would facilitate its diffusion from the lipid matrix to the outer aqueous environment. Mathematical modeling has shown the expression of the release mechanism of drugs from the carrier systems that lead to the release profiles. Various mathematical equations were performed to define the kinetic model of IMT release results [
51]. From these different models, F16-IMT and F19-IMT formulations showed suitable kinetic models (zero order, Korsmeyer–Peppas and Hixon–Crowell models) according to the r
2 values (r
2 > 0.95) for phosphate buffer. Particularly, the Korsmeyer–Peppas model is found to be appropriate for F16-IMT formulation. The most commonly used kinetic model in drug release studies, especially for lipid nanoparticles, is the Korsmeyer–Peppas model, which defines the drug transport through Fickian or non-Fickian transports [
52,
53]. According to kinetic model calculations, Fickian transport was found to be suitable for IMT release of F16-IMT since there is an efflux of IMT from high amount to low amount depending on time [
53], and IMT release can be controlled with the erosion mechanism [
54]. The remaining NLCSs (F9-IMT, F15-IMT, F20-IMT, F21-IMT) are much smaller for in vitro IMT release kinetic models, and no changes were found in comparison to the rest of the models (
p < 0.05).
The charge of particles affects the cytotoxicity of formulations. NLCSs with negatively charged particles present less cytotoxicity than positively charged particles. This is generally reconciled with cell membrane disruption and consequent cell death [
44]. The oleic acid and compritol 888 mixture were used to prepare NLCSs which have a negative zeta potential value [
45,
46]. When nanosystems are in close vicinity to a cell, interactions can be obtained between the nanosystem and the cell. This leads to the membrane wrapping of the nanosystem followed by cellular uptake. Cytotoxicity study helps to understand how the nanosystem influences cell viability so that their undesirable properties can be avoided. Cellular uptake and cytotoxicity studies also cause nanoparticles to move into the clinical arena. The cellular uptake and cytotoxicity results indicated that the increased cellular uptake of IMT and reduction of IMT toxicity on CRL-1739 were obtained with NLCSs and were found to be in accordance with previously reported studies [
55,
56,
57].