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      Cyclodextrins as pharmaceutical solubilizers

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      Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews
      Elsevier BV

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          Abstract

          Cyclodextrins are useful functional excipients that have enjoyed widespread attention and use. The basis for this popularity from a pharmaceutical standpoint, is the ability of these materials to interact with poorly water-soluble drugs and drug candidates resulting in an increase in their apparent water solubility. The mechanism for this solubilization is rooted in the ability of cyclodextrin to form non-covalent dynamic inclusion complexes in solution. Other solubilizing attribute may include the ability to form non-inclusion based complexes, the formation of aggregates and related domains and the ability of cyclodextrins to form and stabilize supersaturated drug solutions. The increase in solubility also can increase dissolution rate and thus improve the oral bioavailability of BCS Class II and IV materials. A number of cyclodextrin-based products have reached the market based on their ability to camouflage undesirable physicochemical properties. This review is intended to give a general background to the use of cyclodextrin as solubilizers as well as highlight kinetic and thermodynamic tools and parameters useful in the study of drug solubilization by cyclodextrins.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews
          Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews
          Elsevier BV
          0169409X
          July 2007
          July 2007
          : 59
          : 7
          : 645-666
          Article
          10.1016/j.addr.2007.05.012
          21f538c6-21dc-42e2-8983-f80cfac58f3c
          © 2007

          https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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