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. 2021 Sep 22;13(10):1533. doi: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13101533

Table 1.

Comparative table summarizing all forms of IFN-α, IFN-β, and IFN-γ delivery systems described in the scientific literature from 1996 to March 2021.

IFN Type Encapsulating Matrix Route of Administration Encapsulation Method Physical Properties Formulation Objective Advantages/Disadvantages Ref.
IFN-α Microspheres of
LEAVE
In vitro Double emulsion/solvent evaporation Size = 186 µm Stabilization of IFN-α on PELA particles with sustained release and retention of antiviral activity for up to 11 days in in vitro studies. A: stabilization of IFN in the matrix
D: initial burst release
[119]
PLGA microspheres In vitro Double emulsion/solvent evaporation Size = 1.8 µm Sustained in vitro release of methoxy-PEG-IFN-α for up to 3 weeks, although they exhibited high release peaks. A: solubility maintained
D: initial burst release
[120]
PLGA/
poloxamer
In vitro Oil-in-oil solvent extraction Size = 40 µm Evaluation of microparticles and nanoparticles as an in vitro controlled release system. The MPs released IFN for up to 96 days. A: integrity and activity of the molecule
D: initial burst release
[54]
Multivesicular liposomes In vitro Double emulsion/solvent evaporation Size = ~20 µm Development of a system for controlled and sustained release of PEG-IFN-α for up to 6 days in vitro. A: high stability and encapsulation efficiency
D: initial burst release
[101]
Uni- and multivesicular liposomes Intramuscular Film hydration-dilution Size = 101 nm Prolonged retention of IFN-α-2b for up to 24 h at the application site after intramuscular administration in Kungming mice. A: high retention at the application site
D: loss of activity
[102]
Lysine-coated gold nanoparticles In vitro Chloroauric acid and borohydride reduction Size without IFN = 10 nm in vitro transport of IFN-α on gold nanoparticles coupled to lysine found on the particle surface. A: stable conjugation in water
D: modification of the carboxyl groups of the molecule
[145]
Poly(ether-ester) microspheres (Poly-Active) Subcutaneous Double emulsion/solvent evaporation Size = ~30 µm Phase IIB clinical study of Locteron®, a 14-day dose–response sustained-release formulation, well tolerated by patients at a dose of 80 µg. A: significant decrease in adverse events
D: scarce report of its physicochemical characterization
[121]
PLGA microspheres In vitro Double emulsion/solvent evaporation Size = 28.1 µm Encapsulation of IFN-α in PLGA microparticles in vitro. No changes were detected in the physicochemical and biological characteristics of the molecule released by diffusion for 24 h at 37 °C. A: uniform size distribution
D: IFN instability
[127]
PLGA microspheres Intramuscular Double emulsion/solvent evaporation Size = 81.23 µm Increased residence time of IFN-α in serum up to 18 days, and sustained release with activity up to 12 days in studies in rhesus monkeys. A: increase in circulation time in vivo
D: loss of biological activity
[128]
Alginate microspheres
chitosan
Intramuscular Coacervation Size = 2.18 µm Evaluation of pharmacokinetics in ICR mice, revealing a 4-fold increase in the half-life of IFN-α, with no increased peak concentration, and reduced bioavailability A: increase in maximum serum concentration
D: low encapsulation efficiency
[129]
PLA and PLGA microspheres In vitro Double emulsion/solvent evaporation with magnetite nanoparticles inclusion Average size = 2.5 µm
Size distribution = 0.5–3.5 µm
Particle loading with magnetite for site-specific delivery. In vitro antiviral assays in Vero cells against vesicular stomatitis virus indicated a slight reduction in the antiviral activity of the particles. A: particle direction using magnetic field
D: low encapsulation efficiency
[130]
PLGA microspheres In vitro Double emulsion/solvent evaporation Size distribution = 40.54–115.62 µm Sustained release maintains the molecule’s biological activity for up to 7 days in in vitro studies in Wish cells against vesicular stomatitis virus. A: high encapsulation efficiency
D: in vivo performance was not evaluated.
[131]
IFN-α PLGA-PEGT/PBT microspheres Subcutaneous Double emulsion/solvent evaporation Size = 28.94 µm Extended cumulative release for up to 23 days in vitro, conforming to zero-order kinetics. Plasma levels were stable for 13 days in Sprague–Dawley rats, starting with a rapid release on day 1. A: high encapsulation efficiency
D: initial burst release
[132]
PLGA nanoparticles with adsorbed HBV antigens Intravenous Double emulsion Size = 174 nm
PZ = +30 mV
System aimed at treating hepatitis B. Studies in BALB/c mice indicated that nanoparticles transport IFN to hepatocytes, with good systemic circulation. A: site-specific transport
D: low encapsulation efficiency
[148]
Liposomes Intramuscular Film hydration Size = 82–172 nm
PDI < 0.35
Increased half-life, peak time, and bioavailability of encapsulated IFN-α-2b in Wistar rats. A: accumulation in the liver
D: non-uniform size
[103]
Gold nanoparticles plus hyaluronic acid (HA) Intravenous Chloroauric acid reduction with citrate and reductive amination of HA Size = 52.23 nm
PDI = 0.089
Selective transport to the liver for HCV treatment. Biological activity of IFN-α is similar to PEG-Intron in vitro (Daudi), in vivo (BALB/c mice). A: serum stability
D: slow initial release
[146]
Protamine sulfate-impregnated gelatin microspheres In vitro Emulsion polymerization with glutaraldehyde as a crosslinker Size = 28.94 µm Protamine sulfate impregnation to increase the release time of IFN-α to 336 h and prolong the cytotoxic effect in vitro in ovarian cancer Skov3 cells A: almost complete release
D: no correlation with cytotoxicity
[133]
Chondroitin sulfate and PVP Intradermal Two-solution system in polydimethylsiloxane molds Arrangements of 12 × 12 microneedles.
Dimensions: 680 × 380 μm
Transport of IFN-α in microneedles. In vivo studies (SD rats), the needles have good stability for two months and do not cause skin damage. A: no injections required
D: limited stability over time
[134]
PLGA and PEG-PLGA nanoparticles In vitro Double emulsion/solvent evaporation Size = 104–129 nm Evaluation of sustained release of IFN-α under in vitro conditions: phosphate-buffered saline and blood plasma. A: sustained and stable release
D: in vivo pharmacokinetics not evaluated.
[149]
Chitosan nanoparticles Evaluation of the oral route Ionotropic gelation Size = 36 nm
PZ = +30 mV
Nanoparticles for oral administration, with in vitro antiviral activity (MDBK) comparable to commercial IFN-α. IFN levels in plasma 1h after in vivo inoculation (in CF-1 mice). A: high encapsulation efficiency
D: non-specific release in the stomach
[150]
PEGylated Liposomes Franz Cell Diffusion System Film hydration Size = 181 nm
PZ = −13 mV
Formulation for treatment of human papillomavirus. No in vitro release. Ex vivo studies in goat vaginal tissue with high penetration of the molecule into the tissue. A: crosses mucosa
D: in vitro and ex vivo release was not correlated
[105]
POEGMA-PHPMA copolymer micelles Intravenous Self-assembly of copolymer blocks Size = 64.9 nm Formation of micelles by self-assembled copolymer blocks that encapsulated IFN-α, with increased half-life up to 83.8 h, and antitumor activity in mice with ovarian tumors A: effective tumor suppression
D: decrease in biological activity
[57]
Chitosan nanoparticles Oral Ionotropic gelation Size = 36 nm
PDI = 0.47
Potential Z = +30 mV
Evaluation of oral administration of nanoparticles. In vitro (Caco-2:HT29-MTX (9:1)) and in vivo (BALB/c mice) studies confirmed improved pharmacokinetics and bioavailability. A: crosses intestinal epithelium
D: no analysis in disease models
[151]
Core-shell nanoparticles; core: HSA-IFN-α, shell: PSS-CS-PSS Subcutaneous Core: aqueous precipitation; shell: layer-by-layer assembly Size = 100 nm
PZ = −50 mV
Sustained-release after ten days in Pannon rabbits, with biological activity similar to lyophilized HSA-IFN-α. A: bioactivity maintained
D: PSS is not biocompatible
[152]
Elastin-like copolypeptide micelles Intravenous Self-assembly of two copolypeptide building blocks Size = 48 nm Formation of micelles by blocks of two self-assembled polypeptides that encapsulated IFN-α, with an increase in its half-life up to 54.7 h, and antitumor activity in mice with ovarian tumors. A: efficient accumulation in tumors
D: encapsulation efficiency is not reported.
[58]
IFN-β Poly(methacrylic acid-ethylene glycol) microparticles Direct intestinal UV polymerization using TEGDMA as crosslinker Size < 53 µm Encapsulation for intestinal delivery of IFN-ß. In vitro and in vivo results in Sprague–Dawley rats showed sustained release and improved pharmacokinetics. A: pH-sensitive behavior
D: incomplete release
[135]
TMC-PEGDMA-MAA microparticles Oral Suspension polymerization by free radicals Size = 1–3.5 µm at intestinal pH (6.8) pH-sensitive oral transport system for the treatment of multiple sclerosis. Most of the IFN-ß was released in vitro at intestinal pH. Release profile in New Zealand White rabbits exceeded 24 h. A: pH-sensitive
D: in vitro and in vivo release was not correlated
[136]
PLGA and PEG-PLGA nanoparticles Subcutaneous Double emulsion/solvent evaporation Size = 145 nm and 163 nm
PZ = 17.7 and 18.8 mV
Treatment of Multiple Sclerosis. No toxicity in vitro, in vivo studies in Wistar rats showed mild toxic effects such as pale kidney and pyelectasis. A: high encapsulation efficiency
D: mild toxicity
[153]
Chitosan nanoparticles/cyclodextrin Intranasal Gelation Size = 206 nm
PZ = 20 mV
PDI = 0.13
Nasal administration of the formulation for treating multiple sclerosis, with greater effectiveness, than free IFN-β in C57BL/6 mice with sclerosis. A: reduction in encephalomyelitis
D: no CD4+ lymphocyte downregulation
[154]
IFN-γ PLGA microspheres In vitro Double emulsion/solvent evaporation Size = 30–50 µm Stabilization of IFN-γ in microparticles, maintaining the native conformation and biological activity of the protein. A: bioactivity maintained
D: encapsulation destabilizes the protein
[137]
PLA microspheres Oral Double emulsion/solvent evaporation Size = 1.27 µm Sustained release in vitro for 400 h and increased absorption when administered orally in Wistar rats. A: increase in porosity
D: delayed release
[138]
Liposomes Inhalation Freezing, thawing Size = 170–180 nm It demonstrated that encapsulation of IFN-γ and liposomal muramyl tripeptide with chitosan activated alveolar macrophages and increased survival in the treated group. In vivo study in a murine model. A: increase in the activation of alveolar macrophages.
D: loss of biological activity
[97]
BSA nanoparticles Intraperitoneal Coacervation and chemical crosslinking Size = ~340 nm
PZ = −19.6 mV
Evaluation of macrophage activation for Brucella abortus. It increased the bactericidal effect of IFN-γ-activated macrophages in vitro and in vivo (BALB/c mice). A: increased biological activity
D: extended-release only for 20 h
[155]
Liposomes with cyclic peptides Intravenous Film hydration Size = 83.5 nm
PDI = 0.067
Selective liposome transport to hepatic stellate cells increased half-life and antifibrotic activity of IFN-γ with fewer adverse effects in Sprague–Dawley rats. A: selective transport to hepatic cells
D: low encapsulation efficiency
[104]
PLGA core–shell nanoparticles containing IFN-γ and doxorubicin. Intravenous Nanoprecipitation Size = ~100 nm Melanoma immunotherapy. Female C57BL/6 murine model, free IFN at 8 h, encapsulated cleared after 48 h inoculated in mice. There was no toxicity in vital organs. A: temperature-sensitive behavior
D: conditional encapsulation efficiency
[156]
PEGylated Liposomes Intravenous Thin-film hydration and extrusion Size = 135 nm
PDI = 0.05
Preparation of IFN-γ-containing liposomes for colon cancer treatment. Sustained release in vitro for 144 h with an abrupt onset and increased cytokine-activated antitumor immune response in BALB/c mice with C-26 tumor cells. A: significant induction of the antitumor response
D: low encapsulation efficiency
[106]