|
|
Title:
Transdermal systems for the delivery of therapeutic agents including
granisetron using iontophoresis
United States Patent: 7,856,263
Issued: December 21, 2010
Inventors: Anderson; Carter
R. (Inver Grove Heights, MN), Sembrowich; Walter L. (North Oaks, MN),
Morris; Russell L. (Lindstrom, MN), Cohen; Robert (Eden Prairie, MN)
Assignee: Travanti Pharma
Inc. (Mendota Heights, MN)
Appl. No.: 11/112,196
Filed: April 22, 2005
|
|
|
Patheon
|
Abstract
A disposable skin-worn device for the
transdermal delivery at least one dose of charged therapeutic substances,
including granisetron, by iontophoresis, the device comprising a donor
reservoir containing an amount of a therapeutic substance to be delivered
transdermally by iontophoresis, a counter reservoir, a source of electric
power connected in a circuit between the donor reservoir and the counter
reservoir and a control system for controlling current flow in the circuit
to enable at least one dose of the therapeutic substance to be delivered
transdermally by iontophoresis and wherein the control system includes a
control element selected from the group consisting of a sensor activated
by an external signal and a switch.
Description of the
Invention
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
I. Field of the Invention
The present invention is related generally to transdermal delivery of
therapeutic agents by the use of an applied electro motive force (emf),
commonly known as iontophoresis. More specifically, this invention relates
to the transdermal delivery of agents such as the anti-emesis agent
granisetron.
II. Related Art
The process of iontophoresis was described by LeDuc in 1908 and has since
found commercial use in the delivery of ionically charged therapeutic
agent molecules such as pilocarpine, lidocaine and dexamethasone. In this
delivery method, ions bearing a positive charge are driven across the skin
at the site of an electrolytic electrical system anode while ions bearing
a negative charge are driven across the skin at the site of an
electrolytic system cathode.
Earlier, and some present, iontophoretic devices have been typically
constructed of two electrodes attached by adhesive materials to a patient,
each connected by a wire to a remote power supply, generally a
microprocessor-controlled electrical instrument. More recently,
self-contained wearable iontophoretic systems have been developed. These
systems are advantageous in that they do not have external wires and are
much smaller in size. Examples of such systems can be found in a variety
of U.S. patents, examples of which include U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,927,408;
5,358,483; 5,458,569; 5,466,217; 5,533,971; 5,605,536; 5,651,768;
5,685,837; 6,421,561; WO 00/12172; U.S. Pat. No. 6,653,014. These systems
also include two electrodes fixed to the skin of patients by means of
adhesive materials.
Unlike passive delivery patches, iontophoretic devices can incorporate an
ability to modify delivery rates with simple adjustments to the magnitude
of current flow. This ability can be used to create a wearable system,
wherein patients can self-adjust medication delivery in accordance to
individual needs. U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,171,294; 6,216,033; 6,425,892; and
6,745,071 describe iontophoretic devices where patients can self-adjust
pain management dosing of fentanyl or sufentanyl using either on-demand
bolus dosing or changes in continuous delivery rate.
Two-stage iontophoretic devices have also been described, where an
initially high level of current can be used to induce a rapid onset of
action, followed by a automated decrease in current to a lower continuous
level in order to provide a "maintenance" dosage over an extended
time-period. U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,207,752 and 6,421,561 are examples that
serve to describe devices having such staged delivery profiles.
The present invention relates to an improved application of iontophoresis
useful for the treatment of emesis. Emesis, in the form of nausea and
vomiting, commonly occurs following chemotherapy, post-operatively
following treatment with anesthetic agents, or after exposure to biologic
agents and/or radiation, possibly in a military setting. It will be
appreciated that oral dosage forms are convenient, but are unreliable
because in the case of emesis, patients may be unable to keep the
medication ingested.
Granisetron is a selective antagonist of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT3)
receptors, and commercially available in oral or injectable dosage forms.
It is known to be an effective agent for the management of emesis, as both
a primary dose and as a "rescue dose" medication. The term "rescue dose"
is defined as an additional dose necessary to treat breakthrough or
recurring symptoms. For additional information see, for example, "Dose
finding study of granisetron in patients receiving high-dose cisplatin
chemotherapy", by A. Riviere in Br. J. Cancer, 69, 967-971 (1994), which
provides an informative summary of clinical effectiveness of granisetron
administered both as primary and rescue dosing medication.
As to the mode of administration, the disadvantage of oral administration
is evident as noted above. A disadvantage of injectable administration
forms lies in the invasive nature of injections, which can be painful,
require clinical skill, can lead to infection, and are therefore are not
suitable to self administration in a field or home setting.
Recognizing the shortcomings of oral and injectable dosage forms for
granisetron, several companies have described methodologies for a
transdermal administration process. Included are delivery systems for
transdermal administration by: passive patches, heated passive patches,
passive patches applied onto RF treated skin, and spray-on-skin systems
where the total amount applied is fixed and delivery is improved by
co-formulated permeation enhancers.
One advantage of transdermal systems is an ability to provide a sustained
release of medication over time, which may serve to provide a longer
duration of action. However, a significant limitation and disadvantage of
passive transdermal administration is a slow onset of sufficient action to
provide relief. It is not uncommon for a passive transdermal patch to take
several hours (3 or more) before a therapeutic dosage is achieved. With
passive transdermal delivery, the skin can act as a depot, and release to
the bloodstream will not occur until that skin depot area is saturated.
This slow onset of action acts as a clinical limitation in two respects:
1) it cannot replace an existing oral or injectable form because it is a
necessity to apply a patch several hours prior to a chemotherapy or
operative procedure, and 2) a slow acting transdermal patch cannot
reasonably serve as a rescue medication form, where a patient will prefer,
for obvious reasons, a faster acting treatment. This second limitation is
significant, in that it has been shown that, in many cases of highly
emetogenic therapies, such as high dose chemotherapy, a significant
percentage of patients will not be adequately served by a first, primary
dosage form alone.
A more rapid onset of action can be achieved transdermally by using a
system that includes iontophoresis. Granisetron in its hydrochloride salt
form, is positively charged and can be delivered rapidly from a positively
charged anode pad. Recent reports, for example, Scientific Abstract 1:
Evaluation of iontophoretic permeation kinetics of granisetron through
skin by subcutaneous microdialysis, presented at the 2003 AAPS meeting
October, 2003; Scientific Abstract 2: IVIVC of Iontophoretic Delivery of
granisetron by subcutaneous microdialysis, presented at the 2004 AAPS
meeting October, 2004, have demonstrated that with iontophoresis, a
therapeutic dosage can be achieved (in a hairless rat animal model) within
approximately two-hours.
The two-hour system described in the reports, however, is not likely to
provide additional benefit for emesis which may occur for up to several
days after an exposure to an emetogenic procedure. Additionally, even the
two-hour timeframe for achievement of a therapeutic dosage level is also
an unacceptably long period of time necessary for clinician and patient to
be waiting prior to an emetogenic treatment such as chemotherapy. Finally,
the known iontophoresis patches do not provide a means to administer a
second or rescue dosage for emesis management in the event the primary
dosing from the patch is inadequate.
Therefore, a need exists for a simple-to-operate, inexpensive transdermal
dosage form which can not only provide benefit afforded by a transdermal
release of agents such as granisetron, but can also provide an initial or
primary dose and one or more follow-on self-administered rescue doses
treatment very rapidly.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention provides a transdermal iontophoresis device and
method that has the ability to administer a bolus dosage of a therapeutic
agent, particularly a therapeutic granisetron bolus dosage rapidly using a
single-use, disposable transdermal patch. In the case of granisetron, the
patch of the invention provides an onset of a therapeutic level of action
in generally less than one hour. Additionally, at least one embodiment of
the patch device enables a patient to rapidly self-administer at least a
second or rescue dose after the initial primary dose.
In one embodiment illustrating the invention, there is provided a
disposable skin-worn patch device for the transdermal delivery of a
plurality of doses of a charged therapeutic substance such as granisetron
by iontophoresis. The device includes a reservoir from which the
therapeutic agent is delivered into the body (donor reservoir) containing
an amount of the substance to be delivered transdermally by iontophoresis
and one or more donor electrodes, a counter reservoir containing a counter
electrode which serves to complete the electrical circuit through the
body, a source of electric power connected in a circuit between the donor
reservoir and the counter reservoir and a user-operable control system for
controlling current flow in the circuit to enable a plurality of
successive doses of therapeutic substance to be administered from the
donor reservoir. The multiple doses may be controlled by switching and
selectively connecting each one of a plurality of donor electrodes
designed to be oxidized or reduced in the iontophoresis circuit operation.
Those skilled in the art will recognize that microprocessor or other
electronic or electrical control circuits can be used to regulate the rate
of current flow, and therefore the rate of medication delivery. In an
alternative embodiment, such a control circuit is implemented to create a
device which can provide bolus and/or alternative waveform dosing from a
single donor electrode configuration.
A first dose may be provided automatically by the application of the patch
to the skin of a patient by a pre-determined switching device in the
circuit. Optionally, the patch also can be employed to supply a sustained,
lower-level delivery rate of granisetron following an initial bolus dose.
Such as system is illustrated and described, for example, in U.S. Pat. No.
6,421,051 assigned to the same assignee as the present application and
which is deemed incorporated herein by reference for any purpose.
In another detailed embodiment, a disposable skin-worn patch is provided
that incorporates an activation system to automatically administer
granisetron after a sensor triggers the system based on an alarm signal.
That control system is designed to respond to an externally generated
signal, such as a radio frequency signal which may be given to a plurality
of such devices as might be worn by soldiers in a military setting. A
switch device may be provided in the circuit to prevent accidental
activation from occurring in stored patches.
Whereas other substances may be delivered from either an anode or a
cathode chamber, using the iontophoresis device of the invention, as
indicated above, one preferred therapeutic substance to be delivered is
granisetron. The granisetron may preferably be contained in a hydrogel
formulation and preferably as a charged species which can only
successfully be delivered in a therapeutic dose utilizing an active
iontophoresis technique. Generally, granisetron and other therapeutically
active species contained in an ionic or charged form, for iontophoresis
deliveries migrate transdermally only slightly using passive application
systems. Such an approach would not deliver a therapeutically effective
level of material. Hydrogels based on polyvinylalcohol,
hydroxypropylmethylcellulose (HPMC), and polyethylene oxide are examples
of hydrogels that can co-formulated with the granisetron.
A therapeutic dose of granisetron is generally accepted to be between
about 300 .mu.g and 1000 .mu.g. Patches in accordance with the present
invention have the capacity to administer or deliver a bolus dosage
between about 300 .mu.g and 1000 .mu.g, in less than about 1 hour. In this
regard, it has been determined that an iontophoretic charge dosage between
20 and 60 mAmin can be used to successfully deliver this amount, so that
current in the range of 0.3 and 1.0 mA would be required for a one-hour
delivery period. Further, it has been learned that an optimal range of
current density falls between 50 .mu.A and 250 .mu.A per square
centimeter. Therefore, the delivery pad contact area needs to be sized
with consideration given to this as a desired current density range.
With respect to the successful and rapid administration of granisetron by
iontophoresis, it has also been determined that the total granisetron
content supplied in the donor reservoir or pad should exceed the desired
total quantity to be delivered by a significant amount. Generally, this
has been found to be a factor of two or even more. Thus, if the desired
total dosage to be delivered, for example, is 2 milligrams (2 mg), it has
been found that at least 4 mg should be provided in the donor reservoir or
pad. Generally, significant loss of delivery efficiency is seen in a
second or rescue dose if the total content of granisetron in the patch is
less than twice the total amount of granisetron desired to be delivered.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
The detailed description contained in this specification is intended to
illustrate the principles of the invention and not to limit them. A
limited number of illustrative embodiments are presented as examples and,
it is anticipated, that others would occur to those skilled in the art
which would be within the scope of the inventive concept.
FIG. 1 (see Original Patent) represents an iontophoretic patch device that
automatically releases a dosage of granisetron or other therapeutic agent
upon application of the device to the skin. That device is additionally
capable of releasing a second dosage after a patient activates a switching
device.
The embodiment of FIG. 1 illustrates an iontophoretic self-powered
skin-applied adhesive patch device generally at 10. The patch includes a
cathode chamber or counter reservoir 12 containing a cathode or counter
electrode 14 and an anode chamber or donor reservoir 16 containing a pair
of anodes 18 and 20 spaced and electrically isolated from each other, but
electrically connected to respective conductors 22 and 24 and to the
material in the reservoir 16. A two-position switch element is shown at 26
and a pair of power sources, which may be conventional button-type
batteries are shown connected in series at 28 and 30. Additional
interconnecting conductor elements are shown at 32, 34 and 36. Thus, using
the switch 26, either anode 18 or 20 can be selectively connected or
patched into a circuit which is completed by the application of the patch
10 to the skin of a patient, as is well known.
The charge capacity and so the dosage associated with either anode 18 or
20 can further be adjusted to any desired amount as by adjusting the
content of oxidizable species at each anode such that depletion of the
oxidizable species or isolation of the connection will produce an open
circuit condition with that anode connected. Techniques for this are
illustrated and described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,653,014 assigned to the same
assignee as the present application and which is hereby incorporated by
reference herein for any purpose.
Although one and two-anode devices are shown in the figures (see Original Patent),
it will be appreciated that, optionally, additional anodes, conductors and
switch positions could readily be added, if desired. The circuit,
optionally, can include elements to limit or control current flow in a
known manner to produce a longer-lasting lower dosage at any switch
position. For example, it may be desired to administer a low steady dose
of granisetron of perhaps about 40 .mu.g/hr over a long period of time
after an initial bolus or first primary dose has been administered. Also,
additional or other types of DC power sources and controls including
programmed controls optionally such as shown in FIG. 3 (see Original Patent),
for example, can be used.
In operation, when the iontophoresis patch device of FIG. 1 is adhesively
applied to the skin of a patient, this will complete a first circuit
including a selectively included anode 18, 20 and the patch will
immediately activate and begin to deliver a dosage of granisetron or other
therapeutic agent contained in the anode or donor reservoir commensurate
with the amount of oxidizable species available to the circuit at the then
connected anode. This will preferably be preset by the position of the
switch 26 set at the point of manufacture so that a known initial bolus of
the granisetron as an initial therapeutic dosage can be delivered rapidly
as soon as the device is applied to the skin of a user. Thereafter, if a
second or so-called "rescue" dose is required, it can be triggered when
the user operates the switch 26 to the alternate position to connect a
second or alternate anode 18, 20 in the circuit to self-administer an
additional dose of granisetron.
The alternate embodiment of FIG. 2 (see Original Patent) includes a
similar skin-applied, self-powered adhesive patch 40 which includes a
cathode chamber or counter reservoir 42 with cathode or counter electrode
44, an anode chamber or donor reservoir 46 provided with a single anode or
donor electrode 48. A normally open switch or other activation element or
device 50, connected with an associated sensor 52 for receiving external
activation signals, is provided in the circuit between anode 48 and a pair
of series-connected power sources 54 and 56. Connecting conductive
elements are shown at 58, 60, 62 and 64.
This embodiment is designed to be worn by one potentially in need of
receiving a dose of the therapeutic material of the patch. Activation of
the patch and delivery of the medication, however, is controlled by an
externally generated signal being received by sensor 52 which, in turn,
triggers the element 50 to close a switch or otherwise function to
complete the circuit. The embodiment 40 is shown with a single anode and
so is designed to deliver a single dose to the wearer.
It will be appreciated that the sensing device 52 may be designed to
receive any of many types of signals including radio frequency, audio,
infrared, etc., and a single signal may activate the patches of many
wearers as might occur among troops commonly engaged in a military
setting. This embodiment provides a means for automated iontophoretic
transdermal granisetron administration in a military field setting, as may
be required for example, with an unexpected exposure of soldiers to
radiation and/or chemical and biological agents.
FIG. 4 (see Original Patent) depicts a sensor-activated embodiment 40a,
similar to that shown in FIG. 2 that is provided with a user activated
element to provide protection against unwanted activation of the patch
(such as in storage). Thus, the embodiment of FIG. 4 is provided with a
manually-operated switch as at 70 which is designed to be closed by the
user prior to sensor-controlled activation. In an open position, switch 70
interrupts the power on conductor 60 thereby disconnecting the power
source 56. The closing of the switch 70 also actives the sensor 52 which
is otherwise in an off mode. This embodiment is shown with a single power
source 56 but as was the case in the embodiment of FIG. 2, additional
power sources, or other controls as in FIG. 3, of course, may be used.
Once the switch 70 is adjusted to the closed position by the user, the
system is enabled for automated sensor-controlled activation.
A further embodiment 10a is shown in FIG. 3 (see Original Patent) in which
an electronic control circuit or element 37 is connected by a conductor 38
to switch 26 and by a conductor 39 to power source 28. The electronic
control circuit element 37 may include a microprocessor or a
microprocessor-operated control which may be a timing controller such as
are well known and which may operate in conjunction with a single donor
electrode 20a to deliver a plurality of doses from the patch as controlled
by the element 37 and switch 26. This is an alternative operating scheme
to that of sequential electrode depletion shown in FIG. 1. The control
system may be used to provide a sustained or steady low-level delivery of
therapeutic agent. In the case of granisetron, this may be about 30-50 .mu.g/hr
and preferably about 40 .mu.g/hr, for example.
The examples of the detailed description show the administration of a
therapeutic agent in which the donor reservoir is the anode chamber. Of
course, as previously indicated, for example, it will be recognized by
those skilled in the art that an oppositely charged material might be
administered using the cathode chamber as the donor reservoir and the
anode chamber as the counter reservoir. Other variations in configuration
and control are also contemplated. These may include circuit components to
control delivery power over time or the like.
Claim 1 of 44 Claims
1. A disposable skin-worn device for the
transdermal delivery of a plurality of doses of a charged therapeutic
substance by iontophoresis comprising: (a) a single donor reservoir
containing an amount of a therapeutic substance to be delivered
transdermally by iontophoresis, said donor reservoir further including a
plurality of donor electrodes providing separate sources of selectively
connectable reactive material selected from oxidizable material and
reducible material for providing a plurality of successive doses of a
therapeutic substance; (b) a counter reservoir; (c) a source of electric
power connected in a circuit between said donor reservoir and said counter
reservoir; and (d) a control system for controlling current flow in said
circuit to enable the plurality of successive doses of said therapeutic
substance to be administered from said donor reservoir. ____________________________________________
If you want to learn more
about this patent, please go directly to the U.S.
Patent and Trademark Office Web site to access the full
patent.
|