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Showing papers on "Drug carrier published in 1975"


Patent
Alejandro Zaffaroni1
03 Mar 1975
TL;DR: In this paper, a drug delivery device for administering a drug at a controlled rate for a prolonged period of time to produce a local or systemic physiological or pharmacological effect is comprised of a wall surrounding a reservoir containing a drug.
Abstract: A drug delivery device for administering a drug at a controlled rate for a prolonged period of time to produce a local or systemic physiological or pharmacological effect is comprised of a wall surrounding a reservoir containing a drug. The reservoir is formed of a drug carrier permeable to the passage of the drug and in which the drug has limited solubility. The wall is formed in at least a part of a drug release rate controlling material also permeable to the passage of the drug, but the rate of passage of the drug through the wall is lower than the rate passage of the drug through the drug carrier so that drug release by the wall is the drug release rate controlling step for releasing drug from the drug delivery device.

565 citations


MonographDOI
01 Jun 1975

349 citations


Patent
Alejandro Zaffaroni1
17 Oct 1975
TL;DR: In this article, a drug delivery device for administering a drug at a controlled rate for a prolonged period of time to produce a local or systemic physiological or pharmacological effect is comprised of a wall surrounding a reservoir containing a drug.
Abstract: A drug delivery device for administering a drug at a controlled rate for a prolonged period of time to produce a local or systemic physiological or pharmacological effect is comprised of a wall surrounding a reservoir containing a drug. The reservoir is formed of a solid drug carrier permeable to the passage of the drug. The wall is formed in at least a part of a microporous material the pores of which contain a drug release rate controlling medium also permeable to the passage of the drug, but the rate of passage of the drug through the medium is lower than the rate passage of the drug through the solid drug carrier so that drug release by the medium in the microporous wall is the drug release rate controlling step for releasing drug from the drug delivery device.

270 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
05 Jun 1975-Nature
TL;DR: Instead of direct substitution of the drugs on the Ig, an intermediate carrier molecule is heavily substituted and the drug carrier then linked to Ig and a conjugate is produced with both a high concentration of drug and little loss of antibody activity.
Abstract: THE possibility of using cytotoxic drugs linked to tumour-specific antibodies as a form of cancer chemotherapy has been revived recently. In theory the antibodies would selectively transport the drugs to the target tumour site. The demonstration by Ghose et al.1,2 and also by Flechner3 that chlorambucil and antibody combined produce an augmented antitumour effect can, however, be explained by an additive or synergistic effect of drugs and antibody uncombined, since there is a high probability of in vivo dissociation4–6. Although this synergistic drug–antibody effect has been studied in detail7–9, the original aim of preparing a stable drug–antibody conjugate has also been pursued and evidence of in vivo tumour suppression has been obtained with covalent conjugates of rabbit antitumour immunoglobulin (Ig) and alkylating agents10,11. In these studies, direct conjugation of the drugs with Ig was carried out using a water-soluble carbodiimide. Successful tumour suppression was, however, dependent on using large amounts of linked material since severe limitations are imposed on the degree of drug substitution by the physico-chemical changes induced in the immunoglobulin by linkage. These changes are reflected in loss of antibody activity and poor water solubility of the preparations thus limiting the clinical potential of complexes in this form. Here we describe a method of overcoming these problems. Instead of direct substitution of the drugs on the Ig, an intermediate carrier molecule is heavily substituted and the drug carrier then linked to Ig. By minimising interference with the chemical structure of Ig in this linkage step, a conjugate is produced with both a high concentration of drug and little loss of antibody activity. This conjugate has proved effective in suppressing tumour growth in mice.

156 citations


Patent
Alejandro Zaffaroni1
06 Mar 1975
TL;DR: A drug delivery device for administering a drug at a controlled rate for a prolonged period of time to produce a local or systemic physiological or pharmacological effect is comprised of a wall surrounding a reservoir containing a drug as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: A drug delivery device for administering a drug at a controlled rate for a prolonged period of time to produce a local or systemic physiological or pharmacological effect is comprised of a wall surrounding a reservoir containing a drug The reservoir is formed of a drug carrier permeable to the passage of the drug and in which the drug has limited solubility The wall is formed in at least a part of a drug release rate controlling material also permeable to the passage of the drug, but the rate of passage of the drug through the wall is lower than the rate passage of the drug through the drug carrier so that drug release by the wall is the drug release rate controlling step for releasing drug from the drug delivery device

81 citations