4.7 Review

Drug Nanocrystals: Focus on Brain Delivery from Therapeutic to Diagnostic Applications

Journal

PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 14, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics14040691

Keywords

nanomedicine; amorphism; central nervous system; solubility; nanotechnology

Funding

  1. University of Catania, Ricerca di Ateneo [CUP 57722172124]

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The development of nanocrystalline drug technology has shown promising results in improving drug solubility and bioavailability. The use of nanocrystals as carrier-free drug particles has proven to be effective in the treatment of CNS diseases and has potential applications in diagnostic imaging. The clinical effectiveness of nanocrystals is leading to an increasing number of FDA-approved products, particularly for neurological disorders.
The development of new drugs is often hindered by low solubility in water, a problem common to nearly 90% of natural and/or synthetic molecules in the discovery pipeline. Nanocrystalline drug technology involves the reduction in the bulk particle size down to the nanosize range, thus modifying its physico-chemical properties with beneficial effects on drug bioavailability. Nanocrystals (NCs) are carrier-free drug particles surrounded by a stabilizer and suspended in an aqueous medium. Due to high drug loading, NCs maintain a potent therapeutic concentration to produce desirable pharmacological action, particularly useful in the treatment of central nervous system (CNS) diseases. In addition to the therapeutic purpose, NC technology can be applied for diagnostic scope. This review aims to provide an overview of NC application by different administration routes, especially focusing on brain targeting, and with a particular attention to therapeutic and diagnostic fields. NC therapeutic applications are analyzed for the most common CNS pathologies (i.e., Parkinson's disease, psychosis, Alzheimer's disease, etc.). Recently, a growing interest has emerged from the use of colloidal fluorescent NCs for brain diagnostics. Therefore, the use of NCs in the imaging of brain vessels and tumor cells is also discussed. Finally, the clinical effectiveness of NCs is leading to an increasing number of FDA-approved products, among which the NCs approved for neurological disorders have increased.

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