Establishing quantitative relationships between changes in nasal spray in vitro metrics and drug delivery to the posterior nasal region

Int J Pharm. 2023 Mar 25:635:122718. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2023.122718. Epub 2023 Feb 11.

Abstract

Nasal sprays are typically characterized using in vitro spray metrics such as spray cone angle and droplet size distribution. It is currently not clear how these in vitro metrics correlate with regional nasal deposition, and these relationships could help explain the impact of product differences. In this study, the effects of changes in spray cone angle, spray velocity, spray ovality and droplet size distribution on regional nasal deposition were analyzed using a validated computational fluid dynamics model in recently developed adult characteristic nasal airway anatomies. The impact of the spray on the surrounding air phase was included. Results indicated that changes in spray cone angle largely influenced the nasal posterior deposition (PD) of the drug. Changes in the plume ovality and characteristic droplet size moderately influenced PD, but the results were dependent on the insertion conditions and nasal geometry. Changes in spray velocity and uniformity constant of the droplet size distribution had only minimal influence on PD. The rank order of metrics having the greatest to least impact on PD was cone angle ≫ plume ovality ≫ characteristic droplet size ≫ velocity ≫ size distribution uniformity constant. Overall, results from this study established quantitative relationships for predicting expected changes in PD.

Keywords: Computational fluid dynamics; Modeling; Nasal drug delivery; Nasal spray; Spray In vitro metrics; Spray deposition; Spray droplets; Two-way coupling.

MeSH terms

  • Administration, Intranasal
  • Adult
  • Aerosols
  • Humans
  • Nasal Sprays*
  • Nebulizers and Vaporizers*
  • Particle Size

Substances

  • Nasal Sprays
  • Aerosols