Litcius/Paper detail

Opportunities for milk and milk-related systems as ‘new’ low-cost excipient drug delivery materials

Malinda Salim, Thomas Eason, Ben J. Boyd

2022Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Milk is well recognised as an amazing delivery system for essential lipids, poorly soluble nutrients, sugars, amino acids and delivery of critical biological molecules to sustain the infant and adult alike. It is also a safe and abundant resource with potential to act as a low-cost material for formulation of medicines, especially for paediatric patients and those in low economy settings. However, its use in low cost formulations has never developed beyond preclinical evaluation. Reasons for this are several-fold including variable composition and therefore regulatory challenges, as well as a lack of clear understanding around when milk or milk-related materials like infant formula could best be deployed by linking drug properties with excipient composition attributes, especially when taking digestion into account. This review collects the current understanding around these issues. It is apparent from the evolving understanding that while milk may be a bridge too far for translation as an excipient, infant formula is positioned to play a key role in the future because, as a powder-based excipient, it has the performance benefits of milk powder together with the controlled specifications during manufacture and versatility of application to function as a low cost lipid excipient to enable potential translation for the oral delivery of poorly water soluble drugs for key populations including paediatrics and low economy medicines.

Topics & Concepts

ExcipientDrug deliveryBusinessBreastfeedingDrugChemistryBiotechnologyMedicineBiochemical engineeringPharmacologyBiologyEngineeringPediatricsOrganic chemistryAdvanced Drug Delivery SystemsPharmaceutical studies and practicesDrug Solubulity and Delivery Systems