Browsing by Author "Dong, Yifan"
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- Amorphous solid dispersions of enzalutamide and novel polysaccharide derivatives: Investigation of relationships between polymer structure and performanceWilson, Venecia R.; Lou, Xiaochun; Osterling, Donald J.; Stolarik, DeAnne F.; Jenkins, Gary J.; Nichols, Brittany L. B.; Dong, Yifan; Edgar, Kevin J.; Zhang, Geoff G. Z.; Taylor, Lynne S. (Springer Nature, 2020-10-28)Amorphous solid dispersion (ASD) is a widely employed formulation technique for drugs with poor aqueous solubility. Polymers are integral components of ASDs, but mechanisms by which polymers lead to the generation and maintenance of supersaturated solutions, which enhance oral absorption in vivo, are poorly understood. Herein, a diverse group of newly synthesized cellulose derivatives was evaluated for their ability to inhibit crystallization of enzalutamide, a poorly soluble compound used to treat prostate cancer. ASDs were prepared from selected polymers, specifically a somewhat hydrophobic polymer that was extremely effective at inhibiting drug crystallization, and a less effective, but more hydrophilic, crystallization inhibitor, that might afford better release. Drug membrane transport rate was evaluated in vitro and compared to in vivo performance, following oral dosing in rats. Good correlation was noted between the in vitro diffusion cell studies and the in vivo data. The ASD formulated with the less effective crystallization inhibitor outperformed the ASD prepared with the highly effective crystallization inhibitor in terms of the amount and rate of drug absorbed in vivo. This study provides valuable insight into key factors impacting oral absorption from enabling ASD formulations, and how best to evaluate such formulations using in vitro approaches.
- Amorphous solid dispersions of enzalutamide and novel polysaccharide derivatives: investigation of relationships between polymer structure and performanceWilson, Venecia R.; Lou, Xiaochun; Osterling, Donald J.; Stolarik, DeAnne F.; Jenkins, Gary J.; Nichols, Brittany L. B.; Dong, Yifan; Edgar, Kevin J.; Zhang, Geoff G. Z.; Taylor, Lynne S. (Nature Research, 2020-10-28)Amorphous solid dispersion (ASD) is a widely employed formulation technique for drugs with poor aqueous solubility. Polymers are integral components of ASDs, but mechanisms by which polymers lead to the generation and maintenance of supersaturated solutions, which enhance oral absorption in vivo, are poorly understood. Herein, a diverse group of newly synthesized cellulose derivatives was evaluated for their ability to inhibit crystallization of enzalutamide, a poorly soluble compound used to treat prostate cancer. ASDs were prepared from selected polymers, specifically a somewhat hydrophobic polymer that was extremely effective at inhibiting drug crystallization, and a less effective, but more hydrophilic, crystallization inhibitor, that might afford better release. Drug membrane transport rate was evaluated in vitro and compared to in vivo performance, following oral dosing in rats. Good correlation was noted between the in vitro diffusion cell studies and the in vivo data. The ASD formulated with the less effective crystallization inhibitor outperformed the ASD prepared with the highly effective crystallization inhibitor in terms of the amount and rate of drug absorbed in vivo. This study provides valuable insight into key factors impacting oral absorption from enabling ASD formulations, and how best to evaluate such formulations using in vitro approaches.
- Amphiphilic hydroxyalkyl cellulose derivatives for amorphous solid dispersion prepared by olefin cross-metathesisDong, Yifan; Mosquera-Giraldo, Laura I.; Troutman, Jacob; Skogstad, Brittny; Taylor, Lynne S.; Edgar, Kevin J. (Royal Society of Chemistry, 2016-07-07)Olefin cross-metathesis (CM) has enabled design and synthesis of diverse, amphiphilic cellulose ether derivatives (e.g. of ethyl and methyl cellulose). In this paper, hydroxyalkyl cellulose was selected as a hydrophilic starting material, with the additional advantage that it has DS (OH) 3.0 that allows targeting of a full range of DS of selected functional groups. Hydroxypropyl cellulose (HPC) was first etherified with 5-bromopent-1-ene to attach olefin “handles” for metathesis, whereby control of molar ratios of sodium hydride and 5-bromopent-1-ene permits full DS control of appended olefin. These olefin-terminated HPC ethers then were subjected to CM with acrylic acid and different acrylates, followed by diimide hydrogenation to reduce the resulting α,β-unsaturation. NMR and FT-IR spectroscopies were useful tools for following reaction progress. One of the product carboxyl-functionalized HPC derivatives, designated HPC-Pen106-AA-H, showed high promise as a crystallization inhibitor of the antiviral drug telaprevir. Its nucleation-induction inhibitory ability was compared to those of commercial controls, HPC and HPMCAS. All three polymers were very effective for inhibiting telaprevir crystallization, increasing induction time up to 8-fold. HPC did not effectively prevent amorphous particle growth, whereas the carboxyl-containing HPC-Pen106-AA-H and HPMCAS were able to prevent formation of agglomerates of amorphous drugs.
- Design and Synthesis of Cellulose Ether Derivatives for Oral Drug DeliveryDong, Yifan (Virginia Tech, 2017-05-31)Chemical modification of naturally occurring cellulose into ester and ether derivatives has been of growing interest due to inexhaustible cellulose resources, and to excellent properties and extremely broad applications of these derivatives. However, traditional esterification and etherification involve relatively harsh conditions (strongly acidic or strongly alkaline), greatly limiting the content and range of functional groups that may be installed onto the cellulose backbone. Amorphous solid dispersion (ASD) is an effective method to promote oral delivery of poorly-soluble drugs by dispersing crystalline drugs in a polymer matrix, creating drug supersaturation upon release. Cellulose 𝜔-carboxyesters have been proven to be effective ASD matrices for many different drugs; however, synthesis of such polymers involves protecting-deprotecting chemistry and one synthetic route only leads to one structure. Developing a new generation of cellulosic polymers for oral drug delivery such as ASD matrices requires new synthetic techniques and powerful tools. Olefin cross-metathesis (CM) is a mild, efficient and modular chemistry with extensive applications in organic, polymer, and polysaccharide chemistry. Successful CM can be achieved by appending olefin “handles” from cellulose esters and reacting with electron-deficient olefins like acrylic acid. Cellulose ethers have much better hydrolytic stability compared to esters and are also commercially very important. The overarching theme of this dissertation is to investigate modification of cellulose ether derivatives, and to design and synthesize effective ASD polymers by olefin CM. We first validated the strategy of performing CM by appending metathesis “handles” through etherification and then subjected these terminal olefins to various partners (acrylic acid and different acrylates). After demonstration of the concept, we applied different starting materials (e.g. ethyl cellulose, methyl cellulose, microcrystalline cellulose, and hydroxypropyl cellulose) with distinctive hydrophobicity/hydrophilicity balance. Furthermore, α,β-unsaturated CM products tended to undergo radical crosslinking through abstraction of 𝛾-protons and recombination of polymer radicals. In order to resolve this issue, we first applied post-CM hydrogenation and then explored a thiol-Michael addition to the α,β-unsaturation, which also incorporates an extra functional group through the thioether. We have successfully prepared a collection of cellulose 𝜔-carboxyether derivatives through the above-mentioned method and preliminary drug induction experiments also revealed that these derivatives hold high promise for ASD application. We also explored the possibility of conducting CM in a reverse order: i.e. appending electron-deficient acrylate groups to the polymer, then subjecting it to electron-rich small molecule terminal olefins. The failure of this metathesis approach was speculated to be due mainly to low acrylate reactivity on an already crowded polymer backbone and the high reactivity of rapidly diffusing, small molecule terminal olefins. Last but not least, we further utilized olefin CM to conjugate bile salt derivatives (e.g. lithocholic acid and deoxycholic acid) to a cellulose backbone by converting bile salts into acrylate substrates. Successful CM of bile salt acrylates to cellulose olefin “handles” further demonstrated the great versatility, excellent tolerance, and very broad applicability of this strategy. Overall, we have founded the strategy for performing successful olefin CM in many cellulose ether derivatives with acrylic acid and a variety of different acrylates. Post-CM hydrogenation efficiently removes the α,β-unsaturation and provides stable and effective cellulose 𝜔-carboxyether derivatives for ASD application. Tandem CM/thiol-Michael addition not only eliminates the crosslinking tendency but also enables an even broader library of polymer structures and architectures for structure-property investigations. We anticipate these methods can be readily adapted by polysaccharide chemists and applied with numerous complex structures, which would greatly broaden the range of cellulose and other polysaccharide derivatives for applications including ASDs, P-glycoprotein inhibition, antimicrobial, coating, and other biomedical applications.
- Imparting functional variety to cellulose ethers via olefin cross-metathesisDong, Yifan; Edgar, Kevin J. (The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2015-04-09)Olefin cross-metathesis is a valuable new approach for imparting functional variety to cellulose ethers. Starting from commercially available ethyl cellulose, terminally unsaturated alkyl groups were appended as metathesis handles by reaction with allyl chloride, 5-bromo-1-pentene, 7-bromo-1-heptene and 11-bromo-1-undecene, employing sodium hydride catalyst. These olefin-terminal ethyl cellulose derivatives were then subjected to olefin cross-metathesis with a variety of electron-poor olefin substrates, including acrylic acid and acrylate esters under optimized conditions (5–10 mol% Hoveyda-Grubbs’ 2nd generation catalyst, 37 °C, 2 h). The effects of varying the length of the ω-unsaturated alkyl handle, and of the solvent systems used were evaluated. Ethyl cellulose containing a pent-4-enyl substituent performed best in cross metathesis reactions and a hept-6-enyl substituent gave similarly good results. Ethyl cellulose with allyl substituents gave low to moderate metathesis conversion (<50%), possibly due to steric effects and the proximity of the ether oxygen to the terminal olefin. Interestingly, longer tethers (undec-10-enyl) gave high conversions (up to 90%) but relatively slow reactions (ca. 12 h needed for high conversion). While limited in this study by the relatively low DS (OH) of the starting commercial ethyl cellulose materials, this methodology has strong promise for introduction of diverse functionality to cellulose ethers in chemospecific and mild fashion, enabling amorphous solid dispersion and other applications.
- Polysaccharide derivatives and cross-metathesis processes for preparing themEdgar, Kevin J.; Dong, Yifan; Meng, Xiangtao (U.S Patent Office, 2020-12-01)