posted on 2005-03-23, 00:00authored byKenneth D. R. Setchell, Amnon Brzezinski, Nadine M. Brown, Pankaj B. Desai, Murad Melhem, Trevor Meredith, Linda Zimmer-Nechimias, Brian Wolfe, Yoram Cohen, Yoav Blatt
Pharmacokinetic studies of soybean isoflavones have shown that following oral ingestion, the two
major isoflavones, daidzin and genistin, are hydrolyzed in the intestine, rapidly absorbed into the
peripheral circulation, and eliminated from the body with a terminal half-life of 7−8 h. These
characteristics make maintenance of steady-state plasma isoflavone concentrations difficult to attain
unless there is repeated daily ingestion of foods or supplements containing isoflavones. In an attempt
to sustain more constant plasma isoflavone concentrations, a new slow-release formulation of a
soybean isoflavone extract was prepared by microencapsulation with a mixture of hydroxypropylcellulose and ethylcellulose to alter its dissolution characteristics. In vitro experiments confirmed slow
aqueous dissolution of isoflavones from this formulation when compared with the conventional
isoflavone extract. The pharmacokinetics of this slow-release isoflavone extract was studied in 10
healthy postmenopausal women after oral administration of a single capsule containing the equivalent
of 22.3 mg of genistein and 7.47 mg of daidzein expressed as aglycons. A comparison of the key
pharmacokinetic parameters obtained in this study with those established in extensive studies
performed previously in this laboratory indicated that the mean residence time of genistein and daidzein
increased 2-fold with microencapsulation. These findings are indicative of a decreased rate of
absorption, consistent with the observed slow in vitro dissolution rate. These findings show that it is
feasible to employ polymer matrices that slow the aqueous dissolution for preparing sustained-release
formulations of soy isoflavones. Further studies to optimize such formulations are warranted.
Keywords: Phytoestrogens; pharmacokinetics; humans; isoflavones; genistein; slow-release