The invention relates generally to inhalation nebulizers and more specifically to inhalation nebulizers which form aerosols of liquid pharmaceuticals and liquids that contain pharmaceuticals. More specifically, the invention relates to inhalation nebulizers that form such aerosols medicaments while minimizing aerosol losses.
Inhalation nebulizers deliver therapeutically effective amounts of pharmaceuticals by forming an aerosol which includes particles of a size that can easily be inhaled. The aerosol can be used, for example, by a patient within the bounds of an inhalation therapy, whereby the therapeutically effective pharmaceutical or drug reaches the patient's respiratory tract upon inhalation.
A variety of inhalation nebulizers are known. EP 0 170 715 A1 uses a compressed gas flow to form an aerosol. A nozzle is arranged as an aerosol generator in an atomizer chamber of the inhalation nebulizer and has two suction ducts arranged adjacent a compressed-gas channel. When compressed air flows through the compressed-gas channel, the liquid to be nebulized is drawn in through the suction ducts from a liquid storage container.
This nebulizer is representative of continuously operating inhalation nebulizers, in which the aerosol generator produces an aerosol not only during inhalation but also while the patient exhales. This is represented schematically in
In order to avoid aerosol losses, attempts have been made to restrict aerosol production to part or all of the inhalation phase, thereby obtaining the course schematically represented in
Thus, a need remains for an inhalation nebulizer by means of which, with a low constructional expenditure, an increased amount of aerosol can be provided in the inhalation phase, while at the same time the aerosol losses during the exhalation phase can be reduced.
The invention involves an inhalation nebulizer having both an aerosol generator and a mixing chamber. The aerosol generator includes a liquid storage container for a liquid medicament. In this, a liquid medicament can be a drug that is itself a liquid, or the liquid medicament can be a solution, suspension or emulsion that contains the medicament of interest. In a preferred embodiment, the liquid medicament is an active agent that is in a solution, a suspension or an emulsion.
The aerosol generator also includes a diaphragm that is connected on one side to the liquid storage container such that a liquid contained in the liquid storage container will come into contact with one side of the diaphragm. The diaphragm is connected to a vibration generator that can vibrate the diaphragm so that a liquid in the liquid storage container can be dispensed or dosed for atomization through openings present in the diaphragm and enter the mixing chamber.
The mixing chamber has an inhalation valve that allows ambient air to flow into the mixing chamber during an inhalation phase while preventing aerosol from escaping during an exhalation phase. The mixing chamber also has an exhalation valve that allows discharge of the patient's respiratory air during the exhalation phase while preventing an inflow of ambient air during the inhalation phase.
According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the aerosol generator continuously produces an aerosol. The aerosol is collected in the mixing chamber while the patient exhales into the inhalation nebulizer. The exhalation valve ensures that the patient's exhaled air is vented to the surroundings without significantly reaching the mixing chamber, while the inhalation valve is closed during the exhalation phase and prevents the aerosol from escaping the mixing chamber. During the exhalation phase, the continuously operating aerosol generator accumulates or concentrates the aerosol in the mixing chamber so that during an inhalation phase not only the amount of aerosol generated due to the continuous production is available for the inhalation, but that at the beginning of the inhalation phase an aerosol bolus can be inhaled, which is available because of aerosol accumulation during the exhalation phase.
Here the invention takes advantage of the special characteristics of the atomization of a liquid by an aerosol generator, in particular of the comparatively low speed and good respirability of the aerosol particles directly after generation. Consequently, the aerosol bolus formed during the exhalation phase rapidly stabilizes, i.e. aerosol particle size does not significantly change as a result of evaporation, as the volume of the mixing chamber being available to the amount of aerosol is relatively small and according to the invention practically no ambient air reaches the mixing chamber during the exhalation phase in which the aerosol for the aerosol bolus is generated.
In a preferred embodiment, the diaphragm forms a part of the wall of the liquid storage container so that a liquid within the liquid storage container directly contacts the diaphragm, thereby ensuring continuous aerosol generation. Preferably, the vibration generator is a piezoelectric element.
The exhalation valve can be arranged at the mixing chamber, i.e. in the wall of the mixing chamber. Preferably, the exhalation valve is located near to where the respiratory air of the patient arrives in the inhalation nebulizer. In a preferred embodiment, the exhalation valve is located near the mouthpiece or the mouth piece connection. In order to discharge exhalation air as directly as possible to the environment, in another advantageous development the exhalation valve is arranged in or at the mouthpiece itself which is removably mounted at the mixing chamber and through which the patent inhales the aerosol from the mixing chamber. In this case the mouthpiece can be designed such that it enlarges the mixing chamber and provides additional volume. At the same time the arrangement of the exhalation valve in the mouthpiece permits the valve to lie near the mouthpiece opening, which additionally contributes to a direct discharge of the exhalation air into the surroundings.
In a further advantageous aspect the liquid storage container is a cylinder, the aerosol producing diaphragm is arranged as one side of the cylinder is a circular disk, and the vibration generator is a circular ring surrounding the diaphragm. In this design, ambient air is fed into the mixing chamber through an annular space or gap lying concentrically to the cylinder axis of the liquid storage container. Preferably, a valve element of the inhalation valve also is designed as a circular disk.
Principally, the rotationally symmetrical design of the aerosol generator and also of the mixing chamber, at least in the section receiving the aerosol generator, is advantageous. The diaphragm can be positioned perpendicular to the axis of rotation (
As in the inventive inhalation nebulizer the aerosol production can be carried out continuously, no technically expensive control of the aerosol generator is required. But, nevertheless, an almost optimal course of the aerosol production and provision for the patient can be obtained, as in particular at the beginning of the inhalation phase an aerosol bolus is provided.
The aerosol nebulizer described herein can be used to deliver a variety of different active agents. Any drug that can be provided in a solution, a suspension or an emulsion can be delivered as an active agent via the aerosol nebulizer, which offers the possibility of topical and/or systemic drug delivery, depending on the particle size distribution achieved.
The particle size distribution can be tailored to a particular application. For example, a mass median aerodynamic diameter (MMAD) greater than about 10 μm is preferred for delivering drugs to a patient's nasal passages. Conversely, for pulmonary application, MMAD values less than about 10 μm and particularly below about 6 μm are preferred. Particles below about 3 μm in size can be generated for deep lung and systemic drug delivery with the nebulizer described herein.
By way of example, topical pulmonary drug administration can be used to treat diseases such as asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases, lung infections, lung cancer, cystic fibrosis and others.
The aerosol nebulizer can also be used to deliver drugs that cannot be administered orally due to lack of solubility and bio-availability or poor absorption or degradation of drugs in the gastrointestinal tract. Furthermore, the nebulizer can be used for the systemic administration of drugs which usually require parenteral administration by the intravenous (iv.), intramuscular (im), subcutaneous (sc), and intrathekal route.
Hence, the aerosol nebulizer allows both topical and systemic aerosol drug delivery via either the nasal or the pulmonary route for a wide variety of drugs that can be formulated or prepared in-situ or immediately before use as solution, suspension or emulsion or any other pharmaceutical application system, such as liposomes or nanosomes. The nebulizer can be modified with respect to the pore size and dimension of the mixing chamber to direct aerosol delivery either into the nose or lungs. Therefore, various droplet and particle sizes can be generated which can deliver aerosols with MMADs from 1 to 30 μm.
Various drugs can be administered as formulations with immediate or controlled drug release irrespective of whether or not the drug is coated by an excipient. Alternatively, the drug can be formulated as a vesicle such as a liposome or nanosome, or as a micro and/or nanaocapsule. The nebulizer is useful for the application of nearly all therapeutic drug classes alone or in combinations. Drugs can be formulated as any pharmaceutical acceptable derivative or salt. Chiral drugs can be used as isomers, diastereomers, or racemic mixtures. Examples of therapeutic classes and drug categories are listed below:
Referring to the construction illustrated in
Through openings present in the diaphragm 22, the liquid adjoining one side of the diaphragm 22 is atomized through to the other side of the diaphragm 22 and thus is atomized into the mixing chamber 3.
The liquid storage container 21 preferably provides an entry point for the articular medicament to be dispensed. In one embodiment, the liquid storage container 21 is a liquid reservoir that is directly fitted into the inhalation nebulizer 1. In another embodiment, the medicament is provided to the liquid storage container 21 as a metered volume from either a single dose or multi dose container. If a multi dose container is used, it is preferably equipped with a standard metering pump system as used in commercial nasal spray products.
If the liquid storage container 21 is cylindrical, it is preferred that the diaphragm 22 has a circular design and the vibration generator 23 has an annular design. The inhalation nebulizer 1 includes an aerosol generator 2 and a mixing chamber 3 having an inhalation valve 31 and an exhalation valve 32.
Preferably, the aerosol generator 2 is arranged in a section of the mixing chamber 3 that is also of a cylindrical design. Thereby an annular gap 33 is obtained around the aerosol generator 2 through which the ambient air can flow into the mixing chamber 3 during the inhalation phase.
A mouthpiece 4 is preferably integrally formed with the mixing chamber 3, but it also can be attached removably to the mixing chamber. A patient inhales the aerosol through the mouthpiece 4. The aerosol is generated by the aerosol generator 2 and is stored in the mixing chamber 3. The size and the form of the mouthpiece 4 can be chosen such that it enlarges the mixing chamber 3 and simultaneously provides for the arrangement of the exhalation valve 32. The exhalation valve is preferably located adjacent the opening 41 of the mouthpiece 4 facing the patient.
When a patient exhales into the opening 41 of the mouthpiece 4, the exhalation valve 32 is opened so that the respiratory air of the patient is discharged into the surroundings. To this end, a valve element 321 of the exhalation valve 32 is lifted and frees the opening 322 of the exhalation valve 32. The inhalation valve 31 is closed when the patient exhales into the inhalation nebulizer, as the valve element 311 of the inhalation valve 31 closes the opening 312 of said valve.
When a patient inhales through the opening 41 of the mouthpiece 4, the inhalation valve 31 is opened and frees the opening 312 as the valve element 311 is lifted. Thereby ambient air flows through the inhalation valve 31 and the annular gap 33 into the mixing chamber 3 and is inhaled by the patient together with the aerosol. As aerosol has accumulated in the mixing chamber 3 during an exhalation phase, there is available to the patient an increased amount of aerosol, a so-called aerosol bolus, especially at the beginning of an inhalation phase.
In a preferred embodiment, the inhalation valve is adapted to the cylindrical form of the aerosol 2 and the annular gap 33. The flexible valve element 311 is formed as a circular disk that is attached at a centrally arranged fastening projection 51 of a cap 5 mounted at, e.g. screwed on, the cylindrical section of the mixing chamber 3. The cap 5 also has a cylindrical connecting piece 52 which, in interaction with the outer wall 24 of the liquid storage container 21, clamps and fastens the valve element 311.
At the side of the cylinder connecting piece 52 facing the liquid storage container 21 there is also integrally formed a first circular ring disk 53 in which the openings 312 of the inhalation valve 31 are defined. Corresponding openings 54 are provided in cap 5 so that ambient air can flow through the openings 54 and 312 into the mixing chamber 3 during an inhalation process. At the front side comprising the diaphragm the aerosol generator 2 has a second circular ring disk 25 with openings 26 through which the ambient air flows during the inhalation phases. The circular ring disk 25 rests upon a projection 34 formed at the inner wall of the cylindrical section of the mixing chamber 3. Thus, when the cap 5 is positioned thereupon or screwed thereon, the aerosol generator 2 as well as the flexible valve element 311 of the inhalation valve 31 are securely fixed.
Apart from the above described cylindrical design of the aerosol diaphragm generator and of a section of the mixing chamber, other rotationally symmetrical designs can advantageously be used. Furthermore, the diaphragm of the aerosol generator can also be arranged in an inclined position whereby the spreading of the aerosol generated by the aerosol diaphragm generator can be influenced and thus, with regard thereto, the specific design of the mixing chamber and also of the mouthpiece can be optimized.
The following non-limiting examples are intended only to illustrate the present invention.
The inhalation nebulizer described herein was used to test the atomization of two commercial products along with a novel submicron suspension. A salbutamol-sulfate solution available commercially as VENTOLIN™ (known generically as albuterol) was tested, as was a budesonide suspension sold under the name PULMICORT™. For comparison purposes, a novel submicron suspension of budesonide was also tested. Each solution or suspension was tested during continuous mode and during breath-triggered mode to evaluate the performance of the inhalation nebulizer.
Evaluation included looking at the percent of the test solution available for capture by an inhalation filter, as well as looking at product that remained in the mixing chamber, the fluid feed, or was otherwise lost or unrecoverable.
The results are depicted graphically in
The inhalation nebulizer described herein was tested against a commercially available product (the PARI LC STAR) using the three test components described in the previous Example.
The above specification, data and examples provide an enabling description of the manufacture and use of the invention. Since many embodiments of the invention can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, the invention resides in the claims hereinafter appended.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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199 53 317 | Nov 1999 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US00/29541 | 10/27/2000 | WO | 00 | 9/19/2002 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO01/34232 | 5/17/2001 | WO | A |
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