PMID: 2124411Nov 1, 1990Paper

Clinical efficacy of current transdermal drug delivery systems: a retrospective evaluation

American Pharmacy
J Berba, U Banakar

Abstract

In spite of intensive research on transdermal drug delivery systems (TDDSs), only four--nitroglycerin, clonidine, estradiol, and scopolamine--have reached the market, and the clinical effectiveness of these systems has yet to be clearly demonstrated. Ideally, a candidate for transdermal drug delivery should demonstrate clinical significance within a wide therapeutic range for a well-documented indication for use. Continuous administration of a drug should result in better control of the disease with fewer side effects and a marked increase in patient compliance than when traditional dosage forms are used. It appears that nitroglycerin is a poor candidate for transdermal drug delivery by virtue of the ambiguity associated with its clinical pharmacology, substantial interpatient variation in dose-response relationship, and development of tolerance with potential toxicity risks in chronic administration. Clonidine's well-defined indication for use coupled with its high potency and low molecular weight with high lipid solubility is well suited to transdermal therapy. Because estradiol is unsuitable for use in people who smoke and has dermatotoxic potential, it is a marginal candidate for use in TDDSs. Transdermal scopolamine was no...Continue Reading

Citations

Nov 28, 2002·Clinical Pharmacokinetics·Yie W Chien, Senshang Lin

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