Litcius/Paper detail

Research progress in brain-targeted nasal drug delivery

Qingqing Huang, Xin Chen, Sixun Yu, Gu Gong, Haifeng Shu

2024Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience98 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The unique anatomical and physiological connections between the nasal cavity and brain provide a pathway for bypassing the blood-brain barrier to allow for direct brain-targeted drug delivery through nasal administration. There are several advantages of nasal administration compared with other routes; for example, the first-pass effect that leads to the metabolism of orally administered drugs can be bypassed, and the poor compliance associated with injections can be minimized. Nasal administration can also help maximize brain-targeted drug delivery, allowing for high pharmacological activity at lower drug dosages, thereby minimizing the likelihood of adverse effects and providing a highly promising drug delivery pathway for the treatment of central nervous system diseases. The aim of this review article was to briefly describe the physiological structures of the nasal cavity and brain, the pathways through which drugs can enter the brain through the nose, the factors affecting brain-targeted nasal drug delivery, methods to improve brain-targeted nasal drug delivery systems through the application of related biomaterials, common experimental methods used in intranasal drug delivery research, and the current limitations of such approaches, providing a solid foundation for further in-depth research on intranasal brain-targeted drug delivery systems (see Graphical Abstract).

Topics & Concepts

Nasal administrationMedicineDrug deliveryNasal cavityDrugCentral nervous systemDrug delivery to the brainBlood–brain barrierTargeted drug deliveryPharmacologyAdverse effectSurgeryInternal medicineNanotechnologyMaterials scienceAdvanced Drug Delivery SystemsSupramolecular Self-Assembly in MaterialsLipid Membrane Structure and Behavior