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Title: Delivery of stimulants
through an inhalation route
United States Patent: 6,994,843
Issued: February 7, 2006
Inventors: Rabinowitz; Joshua D. (Mountain
View, CA); Zaffaroni; Alejandro C. (Atherton, CA)
Assignee: Alexza Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
(Palo Alto, CA)
Appl. No.: 815527
Filed: April 1, 2004
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Abstract
The present invention relates to the
delivery of stimulants through an inhalation route. Specifically, it
relates to aerosols containing stimulants that are used in inhalation
therapy. In a method aspect of the present invention, a stimulant is
delivered to a patient through an inhalation route. The method comprises:
a) heating a thin coating of a stimulant, on a solid support, to form a
vapor; and, b) passing air through the heated vapor to produce aerosol
particles having less than 5% stimulant degradation products. In a kit
aspect of the present invention, a kit for delivering a stimulant through
an inhalation route is provided which comprises: a) a thin coating of a
stimulant drug and b) a device for dispensing said thin coating a
stimulant as a condensation aerosol.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
OF THE INVENTION
Formation of Ephedrine or Fenfluramine
Containing Aerosols
Any suitable method is used to form the aerosols of the present invention.
A preferred method, however, involves heating a composition comprising
ephedrine or fenfluramine to form a vapor, followed by cooling of the
vapor such that it condenses to provide an ephedrine or fenfluramine
comprising aerosol (condensation aerosol). The composition is heated in
one of four forms: as pure active compound (i.e., pure ephedrine or
fenfluramine); as a mixture of active compound and a pharmaceutically
acceptable excipient; as a salt form of the pure active compound; and, as
a mixture of active compound salt form and a pharmaceutically acceptable
excipient.
Salt forms of ephedrine or fenfluramine are either commercially available
or are obtained from the corresponding free base using well known methods
in the art. A variety of pharmaceutically acceptable salts are suitable
for aerosolization. Such salts include, without limitation, the following:
hydrochloric acid, hydrobromic acid, acetic acid, maleic acid, formic
acid, and fumaric acid salts.
Pharmaceutically acceptable excipients may be volatile or nonvolatile.
Volatile excipients, when heated, are concurrently volatilized,
aerosolized and inhaled with ephedrine or fenfluramine. Classes of such
excipients are known in the art and include, without limitation, gaseous,
supercritical fluid, liquid and solid solvents. The following is a list of
exemplary carriers within the classes: water; terpenes, such as menthol;
alcohols, such as ethanol, propylene glycol, glycerol and other similar
alcohols; dimethylformamide; dimethylacetamide; wax; supercritical carbon
dioxide; dry ice; and mixtures thereof.
Solid supports on which the composition is heated are of a variety of
shapes. Examples of such shapes include, without limitation, cylinders of
less than 1.0 mm in diameter, boxes of less than 1.0 mm thickness and
virtually any shape permeated by small (e.g., less than 1.0 mm-sized)
pores. Preferably, solid supports provide a large surface to volume ratio
(e.g., greater than 100 per meter) and a large surface to mass ratio
(e.g., greater than 1 cm2 per gram).
A solid support of one shape can also be transformed into another shape
with different properties. For example, a flat sheet of 0.25 mm thickness
has a surface to volume ratio of approximately 8,000 per meter. Rolling
the sheet into a hollow cylinder of 1 cm diameter produces a support that
retains the high surface to mass ratio of the original sheet but has a
lower surface to volume ratio (about 400 per meter).
A number of different materials are used to construct the solid supports.
Classes of such materials include, without limitation, metals, inorganic
materials, carbonaceous materials and polymers. The following are examples
of the material classes: aluminum, silver, gold, stainless steel, copper
and tungsten; silica, glass, silicon and alumina; graphite, porous
carbons, carbon yarns and carbon felts; polytetrafluoroethylene and
polyethylene glycol. Combinations of materials and coated variants of
materials are used as well.
Where aluminum is used as a solid support, aluminum foil is a suitable
material. Examples of silica, alumina and silicon based materials include
amphorous silica S-5631 (Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.), BCR171 (an alumina of
defined surface area greater than 2 m2/g from Aldrich, St.
Louis, Mo.) and a silicon wafer as used in the semiconductor industry.
Carbon yarns and felts are available from American Kynol, Inc., New York,
N.Y. Chromatography resins such as octadecycl silane chemically bonded to
porous silica are exemplary coated variants of silica.
The heating of the ephedrine or fenfluramine compositions is performed
using any suitable method. Examples of methods by which heat can be
generated include the following: passage of current through an electrical
resistance element; absorption of electromagnetic radiation, such as
microwave or laser light; and, exothermic chemical reactions, such as
exothermic solvation, hydration of pyrophoric materials and oxidation of
combustible materials.
Delivery of Ephedrine or Fenfluramine Containing Aerosols
Ephedrine or fenfluramine containing aerosols of the present invention are
delivered to a mammal using an inhalation device. Where the aerosol is a
condensation aerosol, the device has at least three elements: an element
for heating an ephedrine or fenfluramine containing composition to form a
vapor; an element allowing the vapor to cool, thereby providing a
condensation aerosol; and, an element permitting the mammal to inhale the
aerosol. Various suitable heating methods are described above. The element
that allows cooling is, in it simplest form, an inert passageway linking
the heating means to the inhalation means. The element permitting
inhalation is an aerosol exit portal that forms a connection between the
cooling element and the mammal's respiratory system.
One device used to deliver the ephedrine or fenfluramine containing
aerosol is described in reference to FIG. 1. Delivery device 100
has a proximal end 102 and a distal end 104, a heating
module 106, a power source 108, and a mouthpiece 110.
An ephedrine or fenfluramine composition is deposited on a surface 112
of heating module 106. Upon activation of a user activated switch
114, power source 108 initiates heating of heating module
106 (e.g, through ignition of combustible fuel or passage of current
through a resistive heating element). The ephedrine or fenfluramine
composition volatilizes due to the heating of heating module 106
and condenses to form a condensation aerosol prior to reaching the
mouthpiece 110 at the proximal end of the device 102. Air
flow traveling from the device distal end 104 to the mouthpiece
110 carries the condensation aerosol to the mouthpiece 110,
where it is inhaled by the mammal.
Devices, if desired, contain a variety of components to facilitate the
delivery of ephedrine or fenfluramine containing aerosols. For instance,
the device may include any component known in the art to control the
timing of drug aerosolization relative to inhalation (e.g.,
breath-actuation), to provide feedback to patients on the rate and/or
volume of inhalation, to prevent excessive use (i.e., "lock-out" feature),
to prevent use by unauthorized individuals, and/or to record dosing
histories.
Dosage of Ephedrine or Fenfluramine Containing Aerosols
Ephedrine and fenfluramine are given at strengths of 10 mg and 20 mg
respectively for appetite suppression. As aerosols, 2 mg to 20 mg of
ephendrine, and 4 mg to 30 mg of fenfluramine are generally provided per
inspiration for the same indication. A typical dosage of an ephedrine or
fenfluramine aerosol is either administered as a single inhalation or as a
series of inhalations taken within an hour or less (dosage equals sum of
inhaled amounts). Where the drug is administered as a series of
inhalations, a different amount may be delivered in each inhalation. The
dosage amount of ephedrine or fenfluramine in aerosol form is generally no
greater than twice the standard dose of the drug given orally.
One can determine the appropriate dose of ephedrine or fenfluramine
containing aerosols to treat a particular condition using methods such as
animal experiments and a dose-finding (Phase I/II) clinical trial. One
animal experiment involves measuring plasma concentrations of drug in an
animal after its exposure to the aerosol. Mammals such as dogs or primates
are typically used in such studies, since their respiratory systems are
similar to that of a human. Initial dose levels for testing in humans is
generally less than or equal to the dose in the mammal model that resulted
in plasma drug levels associated with a therapeutic effect in humans. Dose
escalation in humans is then performed, until either an optimal
therapeutic response is obtained or a dose-limiting toxicity is
encountered.
Analysis of Ephedrine or Fenfluramine Containing Aerosols
Purity of an ephedrine or fenfluramine containing aerosol is determined
using a number of methods, examples of which are described in Sekine et
al., Journal of Forensic Science 32:1271-1280 (1987) and Martin et
al., Journal of Analytic Toxicology 13:158-162 (1989). One method
involves forming the aerosol in a device through which a gas flow (e.g.,
air flow) is maintained, generally at a rate between 0.4 and 60 L/min. The
gas flow carries the aerosol into one or more traps. After isolation from
the trap, the aerosol is subjected to an analytical technique, such as gas
or liquid chromatography, that permits a determination of composition
purity.
A variety of different traps are used for aerosol collection. The
following list contains examples of such traps: filters; glass wool;
impingers; solvent traps, such as dry ice-cooled ethanol, methanol,
acetone and dichloromethane traps at various pH values; syringes that
sample the aerosol; empty, low-pressure (e.g., vacuum) containers into
which the aerosol is drawn; and, empty containers that fully surround and
enclose the aerosol generating device. Where a solid such as glass wool is
used, it is typically extracted with a solvent such as ethanol. The
solvent extract is subjected to analysis rather than the solid (i.e.,
glass wool) itself. Where a syringe or container is used, the container is
similarly extracted with a solvent.
The gas or liquid chromatograph discussed above contains a detection
system (i.e., detector). Such detection systems are well known in the art
and include, for example, flame ionization, photon absorption and mass
spectrometry detectors. An advantage of a mass spectrometry detector is
that it can be used to determine the structure of ephedrine or
fenfluramine degradation products.
Particle size distribution of an ephedrine or fenfluramine containing
aerosol is determined using any suitable method in the art (e.g., cascade
impaction). An Andersen Eight Stage Non-viable Cascade Impactor (Andersen
Instruments, Smyrna, Ga.) linked to a furnace tube by a mock throat (USP
throat, Andersen Instruments, Smyrna, Ga.) is one system used for cascade
impaction studies.
Inhalable aerosol mass density is determined, for example, by delivering a
drug-containing aerosol into a confined chamber via an inhalation device
and measuring the mass collected in the chamber. Typically, the aerosol is
drawn into the chamber by having a pressure gradient between the device
and the chamber, wherein the chamber is at lower pressure than the device.
The volume of the chamber should approximate the tidal volume of an
inhaling patient.
Inhalable aerosol drug mass density is determined, for example, by
delivering a drug-containing aerosol into a confined chamber via an
inhalation device and measuring the amount of active drug compound
collected in the chamber. Typically, the aerosol is drawn into the chamber
by having a pressure gradient between the device and the chamber, wherein
the chamber is at lower pressure than the device. The volume of the
chamber should approximate the tidal volume of an inhaling patient. The
amount of active drug compound collected in the chamber is determined by
extracting the chamber, conducting chromatographic analysis of the extract
and comparing the results of the chromatographic analysis to those of a
standard containing known amounts of drug.
Inhalable aerosol particle density is determined, for example, by
delivering aerosol phase drug into a confined chamber via an inhalation
device and measuring the number of particles of given size collected in
the chamber. The number of particles of a given size may be directly
measured based on the light-scattering properties of the particles.
Alternatively, the number of particles of a given size is determined by
measuring the mass of particles within the given size range and
calculating the number of particles based on the mass as follows: Total
number of particles=Sum (from size range 1 to size range N) of number of
particles in each size range. Number of particles in a given size
range=Mass in the size range/Mass of a typical particle in the size range.
Mass of a typical particle in a given size range=π*D3*φ/6,
where D is a typical particle diameter in the size range (generally, the
mean boundary MMADs defining the size range) in microns, φ is the particle
density (in g/mL) and mass is given in units of picograms (g-12).
Rate of inhalable aerosol particle formation is determined, for example,
by delivering aerosol phase drug into a confined chamber via an inhalation
device. The delivery is for a set period of time (e.g., 3 s), and the
number of particles of a given size collected in the chamber is determined
as outlined above. The rate of particle formation is equal to the number
of 100 nm to 5 micron particles collected divided by the duration of the
collection time.
Rate of aerosol formation is determined, for example, by delivering
aerosol phase drug into a confined chamber via an inhalation device. The
delivery is for a set period of time (e.g., 3 s), and the mass of
particulate matter collected is determined by weighing the confined
chamber before and after the delivery of the particulate matter. The rate
of aerosol formation is equal to the increase in mass in the chamber
divided by the duration of the collection time. Alternatively, where a
change in mass of the delivery device or component thereof can only occur
through release of the aerosol phase particulate matter, the mass of
particulate matter may be equated with the mass lost from the device or
component during the delivery of the aerosol. In this case, the rate of
aerosol formation is equal to the decrease in mass of the device or
component during the delivery event divided by the duration of the
delivery event.
Rate of drug aerosol formation is determined, for example, by delivering
an ephedrine or fenfluramine containing aerosol into a confined chamber
via an inhalation device over a set period of time (e.g., 3 s). Where the
aerosol is pure ephedrine or fenfluramine, the amount of drug collected in
the chamber is measured as described above. The rate of drug aerosol
formation is equal to the amount of ephedrine or fenfluramine collected in
the chamber divided by the duration of the collection time. Where the
ephedrine or fenfluramine containing aerosol comprises a pharmaceutically
acceptable excipient, multiplying the rate of aerosol formation by the
percentage of ephedrine or fenfluramine in the aerosol provides the rate
of drug aerosol formation.
Utility of Ephedrine or Fenfluramine Containing Aerosols
The ephedrine or fenfluramine containing aerosols of the present invention
are typically used for appetite suppression, for increasing one's energy
level, or for a positive inotropic effect.
Claim 1 of 26 Claims
1. A condensation aerosol for
delivery of a drug selected from the group consisting of ephedrine and
fenfluramine wherein the condensation aerosol is formed by heating a thin
layer containing the drug, on a solid support, to produce a vapor of the
drug, and condensing the vapor to form a condensation aerosol characterized
by less than 10% drug degradation products by weight, and an MMAD of less
than 5 microns.
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