In Vitro Drug Release and Ex Vivo Dermal
Drug Permeation Studies of Selected Commercial
Benzoyl Peroxide Topical Formulations: Correlation Between Human and
Porcine Skin Models
posted on 2025-02-03, 18:06authored byMurilo
de Souza Brighenti, Lilian Rosário
da Silva Montanheri, Marcelo Dutra Duque, Newton Andreo-Filho, Patricia Santos Lopes, Maria Teresa Junqueira Garcia, Lorraine Mackenzie, Vânia Rodrigues Leite-Silva
In vitro release testing (IVRT) serves
as a crucial
tool to assess the quality, physicochemical behavior, and performance
of semisolid formulations already available on the market. In vitro skin permeation studies (IVPT) are widely used
to evaluate the safety and efficacy profiles of topical drugs, utilizing
biological membranes prepared from ex vivo human
and porcine skin tissues. This study aimed to develop and validate
a discriminative IVRT method to evaluate various marketed topical
benzoyl peroxide formulations. Additionally, IVPT was employed to
assess skin permeation and retention profiles of these formulations,
comparing porcine skin results with those obtained by using ex vivo human skin tissues. Physicochemical differences
among the evaluated benzoyl peroxide formulations were identified,
with the poloxamer-based formulation exhibiting a higher release rate.
IVPT using both porcine and human skin differentiated retention and
skin permeation profiles, with the poloxamer-based formulation demonstrating
greater skin retention capacity compared to the other formulations
evaluated. Similar conclusions on benzoyl peroxide retention and cutaneous
permeation were drawn from both porcine and human skin IVPT tests,
confirming the correlation between the two models.