A microsphere-gel in situ forming implant (MS-Gel ISFI) dual-controlled drug delivery system was applied to a high water-soluble small-molecule compound Rasagiline mesylate (RM) for effective treatment of Parkinson's disease. This injectable complex depot system combined an in situ phase transition gel with high drug-loading and encapsulation efficiency RM-MS prepared by a modified emulsion-phase separation method and optimized by Box-Behnken design. It was evaluated for in vitro drug release, in vivo pharmacokinetics, and in vivo pharmacodynamics. We found that the RM-MS-Gel ISFI system showed no initial burst release and had a long period of in vitro drug release (60 days). An in vivo pharmacokinetic study indicated a significant reduction (p < .01) in the initial high plasma drug concentration of the RM-MS-Gel ISFI system compared to that of the single RM-MS and RM-in situ gel systems after intramuscular injection to rats. A pharmacodynamic study demonstrated a significant reduction (p < .05) in 6-hydroxydopamine-induced contralateral rotation behavior and an effective improvement (p < .05) in dopamine levels in the striatum of the lesioned side after 28 days in animals treated with the RM-MS-Gel ISFI compared with that of animals treated with saline. MS-embedded in situ phase transition gel is superior for use as a biodegradable and injectable sustained drug delivery system with a low initial burst and long period of drug release for highly hydrophilic small molecule drugs.
Keywords: MAO-B inhibitor; Sustained release; in situ forming implant; microspheres; water-soluble drug.