An Education on the Previous Successful Attempts at Transdermal Delivery Patches

Author: Bariki Rajasekhar and Haranath Chinthaginjala

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Abstract

The objective of the study was to use a factorial design to gather data on prior attempts at transdermal medication delivery devices. Systems for transdermal drug delivery provide the medication for a protracted length of time (days). The authors conducted a thorough Internet search for relevant literature, consulted national and international peer-reviewed publications, and gathered and summarized data from earlier studies on transdermal patches using factorial analysis. The use of QbD is becoming more prevalent compared to conventional trial-and-error techniques. The medicine was released when the transdermal patches, which were of the matrix and membrane types, were externally attached to the skin. Because they decrease the frequency of treatment and improve patient compliance, the study finds that transdermal drug delivery systems are superior formulations for treating chronic illnesses.

Keywords

Drug delivery, Literature, Patch, Permeation, Polymers, Transdermal

Conclusion

Transdermal technology (TDDS) was widely acknowledged as the creation of a mass delivery methodology, making it the preferred drug injection modality for transdermal delivery across skin types while avoiding first-pass metabolism and other sensitivities linked to various alternative drug administration routes. Drugs may be distributed uniformly at predetermined and controlled rates with TDDS since it is non-invasive, not allergenic, and has a predetermined duration and dose delivery technique. In the pharmaceutical industry, TDDS technology is expanding quickly and has been successful in seizing significant market value as a formulation technique that can enhance drug administration via topical channels.

References

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How to cite this article

Bariki Rajasekhar and Haranath Chinthaginjala (2023). An Education on the Previous Successful Attempts at Transdermal Delivery Patches. Biological Forum – An International Journal, 15(5): 520-524.