This invention relates to a pharmaceutical composition comprising an active material stabilized in water-soluble glassy particles which are mixed with an inactive anhydrous carrier liquid in which the particles are insoluble so that the composition can be administered by injection to an animal or human patient. After injection, the glass particles dissolve in body fluids, releasing the active ingredient.
There have been a number of proposals for liquids suitable to be used as the carrier in such compositions. Essential requirements are that it should be totally non-toxic and that the particles should not dissolve in it. In tests with oily liquids meeting these requirements it was initially found that the particles tended to fall to the bottom of the liquid. To avoid this problem it has been more recently proposed to select a liquid which is particularly dense and to add even denser additives to the particles so as to match their density with the liquid. This density matching technique has shown considerable promise but the need to use a high density liquid greatly constrains the choice of liquid; and those liquids which meet the high density requirement tend to be unsatisfactory for other reasons.
The invention arose in an endeavour to meet the above problem.
It has now been found that by adding just a small amount of liquid to the particles, a flowable mixture is formed of a creamy or paste-like consistency depending on the amount of liquid added. Providing too much liquid is not present in relation to the amount of solids, the particles do not separate out and so the choice of liquids available for use in compositions of this type is greatly increased.
According to the invention there is provided a pharmaceutical composition comprising an active material stabilized in glassy particles which are mixed with a liquid so that they can be delivered to a patient by injection through the skin characterised in that the proportion of particles to liquid is sufficiently high to prevent settlement of the particles at the top or bottom of the liquid.
Expressed another way, the invention provides a pharmaceutical composition comprising an active material stabilized in glassy particles which are mixed with a carrier so that they can be delivered to a patient by injection through the skin characterised in that the carrier is selected, and present in a quantity such that, the mixture has a viscosity or thickness preventing separation of the particles from the carrier.
Because only a small quantity of liquid is required, the volume of the composition needing to be injected is minute as compared with conventional techniques.
It will be understood that, by using the invention, a very wide variety of liquids can be used, in contrast with previous technical thinking which constrained the choice of liquids to those whose densities could be matched to the glassy particles. This means that other desired characteristics can be sought from amongst the vast range of liquids which can now be used.
Liquids which wet the particles are presumed to have the effect that each particle becomes coated with a layer of liquid, effectively forming a lubricant between the particles to assist flow. However, experiments have shown that “wettability” is not an essential characteristic. When a sample of hydrophilic sugar glass particles was mixed vigorously with squalane oil, which is hydrophobic, a thin paste-like mixture was formed, which was too thick to allow separation of the solid and liquid constituents but which nevertheless flowed sufficiently freely to pass though a conventional hypodermic needle. Another hydrophobic liquid, known to be suitable for injection, is sesame seed oil.
Another possible benefit of employing the invention is that, because the injected composition is relatively viscous or even semi-solid, in contrast with conventional non-viscous liquids, it is believed that it will disperse in the body slowly, releasing its active ingredients over a number of days.
Some of the abovementioned materials, eg polyethylene glycols, range from being low viscosity liquids to solid waxes. This raises the possibility of heating a normally waxy polyethylene glycol to make it liquid, dispersing the glassy particles in it, and then allowing it to solidify. If this is done inside a needle, a waxy plug is created on solidification. Because waxes contract on cooling, the plug can easily be pushed out of the needle into the patient's body.
Thus, according to a second aspect of the invention, there is provided a pharmaceutical composition comprising an active material stabilized in glassy particles which are mixed with a carrier so that they can be delivered to a patient by injection through the skin characterised in that the carrier is a waxy or semi-solid material.
According to a third aspect of the invention there is provided a device for injecting into a patient a pharmaceutical preparation comprising an active ingredient preserved in glassy particles, the device including a hypodermic needle; characterised in that the particles are mixed with a settable carrier material which has been allowed to solidify or semi-solidify to form a body in the needle; and means for pushing the solid or semisolid body out of the needle and into a patient.
Two ways in which the invention may be performed will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
Referring firstly to
Another composition, illustrated in
A feature of each of these compositions is that, if a substantially larger proportion of liquid were included, it would not be possible for the solid particles to remain suspended in it. They would eventually settle out and the mixture would need to be re-agitated before use.
Referring now to
Inside the needle is a rod 6, the lower end 6A of which is chamfered at an angle equal to the angle of chamfer of the tube 4. The needle 4 is filled with a composition 7 as described above.
The components of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0520129.8 | Oct 2005 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2006/050312 | 10/4/2006 | WO | 00 | 4/4/2008 |