Organogels for cosmetic and dermo-cosmetic applications
Transcription
Organogels for cosmetic and dermo-cosmetic applications
FORMULATION Kirilov Plamen KIRILOV PLAMEN1*, LE CONG ANH KHANH1, DENIS ALICE1, RABEHI HALIMA1, RUM SILVIA2, VILLA CARLA2, HAFTEK MAREK1,3, PIROT FABRICE1,4 * Corresponding author 1. Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, EA 4169 "Aspects fondamentaux, cliniques et thérapeutiques de la fonction cutanée", SFR Lyon-Est Santé, INSERM US 7, CNRS UMS 3453 Laboratoire de Pharmacie Galénique Industrielle, ISPB, 8 Avenue Rockefeller 69737 Lyon Cédex 08, France 2. Dipartimento di Scienze Farmaceutiche dell’Università, Viale Denedetto XV, Genova, Italia 3. Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, EA 4169 "Aspects fondamentaux, cliniques et thérapeutiques de la fonction cutanée", SFR Lyon-Est Santé, INSERM US 7, CNRS UMS 3453 Laboratoire de Dermatologie, ISPB, 8 Avenue Rockefeller, F-69737 Lyon, Cédex 08, France 4. Groupement Hospitalier Eduard Herriot, Service Pharmaceutique, Fabrication et contrôles des médicaments, Pavillon X, Place d’Arsenal, 69437 Lyon, Cédex 03, France Organogels for cosmetic and dermo-cosmetic applications Classification, preparation and characterization of organogel formulations - PART 1 KEYWORDS: organogel, organogelator, LMOG, formulation, cosmetic product, dermo-cosmetic application. Abstract Organogels are semi-solid systems in which an organic liquid phase is immobilized by a three-dimensional network composed of low molecular weight or polymeric components. Recently, they have raised an increasing interest in the pharmaceutical, cosmetic and food industry. Numerous cosmetic products based on organogels formulations are marketed. Many studies now focus on new applications of organogels and therefore, aim to develop novel systems of organogels and new generations of organogelators. In this review, methods of preparation and characterization of organogel will be described, as well as different classifications and current applications in the cosmetic field, more particularly in dermo-cosmetics. INTRODUCTION Along with the rising customers’ incomes and their interest% in beauty, cosmetic and dermo-cosmetic industry has continuously been developing for the last century. According to l’Oréal, results in 2013 showed this industry is particularly dynamic which is valued about 172 billion euros and experienced an annual increase of 3.8%. Among 6 main categories of cosmetic industry, the skincare sector makes up the largest part of the global cosmetic market, accounting 33.8% in 2012 and is also leading in terms of growth potential with an expected increase of 6% by 2025 (1, 2). In addition to identify attractive active ingredients and new pharmacological targets, an important strategy of developing cosmetic products for skin care is to design more effective delivery systems for cosmetic agents. The skin has been known as an advantageous route of administration for numerous active pharmaceutic and cosmetic ingredients. It offers the possibility for a noninvasive delivery which is controllable, without the risk of gastrointestinal degradation or first-pass liver metabolism of active ingredients. However, as a complex organ designed to isolate the organism from the environment, the skin is a barrier limiting the penetration and absorption of active ingredients and thus represents a challenge to the pharmaceutical and cosmetic development of carrier. In principle, it is essential to choose the appropriate delivery vehicle for each active ingredient, depending on its physicochemical properties and the targeted site. In the cosmetic field, several strategies have been considered to protect active ingredients whose stability could be altered, either by the dispersion medium or the manufacturing process, and also to vectorize them to a specific receptor site. Penetration and permeation through different layers of skin can also be improved by using suitable vehicles. Many of the solutions suppose the incorporation or encapsulation of the active components in particles of various sizes and constitutions, such as liposomes, ethosomes, nanoparticles, etc. Besides, the desirable properties of a formulation for cutaneous application are the acceptability and the feasibility; it should be non-toxic, non-irritation, easy to use and allow a good skin feeling. Typical formulations for cosmetics are: gels, creams, lotions, ointments, sticks, emulsions, powders, etc. Gels are vehicles that have been proved to be favorable for topical drug delivery or for the localized drug action on the skin and other topical routes such as ophthalmic, H&PC Today - Household and Personal Care Today Vol. 10(3) May/June 2015 15 rectal, vaginal (3-5). They are rigid and elastic materials and are widely used in cosmetics, medicines, biomaterials and food technologies. They are also found in numerous daily products, such as soap, shampoo, toothpaste, hair gel and contact lenses. Gels mainly consist of a fluid solvent with a gelator as the minority component: in general, a gelling agent such as a carbomer or a natural gum (i.e. xanthan gum) is dispersed in the solvent (6). Despite high concentration of liquids in the composition of gels, they are defined as a semi-solid formulation, showing a hydrophobic or hydrophilic external solvent phase, thus immobilizing active ingredients within the spaces available of a threedimensional network structure (7, 8). In comparison to cream and ointment, gel formulation may provide better application properties and stability. Thanks to a high solvent content, gels appear to be great vehicles for the dissolution of drugs and also enhance permeation through the skin. Moreover, the incorporation of the active ingredient in a gel matrix allows to control its release rate, increasing the application time and the efficacy. Gels also show protective action and skin hydration properties by limiting the transepidermal water loss (5, 6). Organogels (also called oleogels) are a specific type of gels in which organogelators swell and retain organic solvents in a three-dimensional network. They consist in a non-crystalline, unglossy, thermoreversible solid material and viscoelastic system. The organogelators can be either low-molecular-weight components or polymers forming the network which entrap the solvent, by non-covalent bonds such as Van der Waals forces and hydrogen bonds, or covalent bonds (6, 9). In general, gelators can function as relatively low concentrations, typically inferior to 15 wt%. In some cases, the amount required has been reported to be as low as 0.1 wt% (11). This simplifies the cosmetic formulation due to the reduction of the required amount of rheological additives, as well as reduces potential side effects. The gels obtained from low concentrations of gelators are also very transparent and stable (5). Besides, the capacity of organogelators to form a fibrillar structure and retain significant concentrations of oils attracts the interest of researchers. They also provide a pleasant texture and stabilize many heterogeneous systems. Being thermodynamically stable, the structural integrity of organogels is maintained for longer time periods. They are resistant to microbial contamination: the external phase is non-aqueous; therefore, the internal aqueous phase within organogels is well protected (6, 10). Not only easy to prepare as they have auto-assembly properties, organogels can also boost drug permeation through the stratum corneum thank to their lipophilic nature. Many components known as permeation enhancer such as fatty acids, surfactants, glycols, essential oils and terpenes are used for the preparation of organogels. Moreover, organogel formulations can play a solubilizing role, maximizing the partitioning of active ingredients into the skin tissue (10, 12-15). They have been proved to be advantageous carriers for both hydrophobic and hydrophilic compounds. Recently, lecithin organogels turned out to be a topical vehicle of interest, particularly in skin aging treatments, as the lecithin itself provides skin protection against UV, it shows potential and could be even more effective if combined to active agents against skin aging. Regarding pharmaceutical uses, numerous active ingredients such as vitamins, hormones, NSAIDS, peptides, amino acids, local 16 anesthetics and antifungal agents have been entrapped in lecithin organogels for topical or transdermal delivery assays and presented efficient skin permeation and distribution (12-15). Possessing numerous advantages, organogels have been invested for a wide range of applications including cosmetics, pharmaceutical and medical fields, food industry, cleaning or light emitting materials, etc. (9, 11, 16, 17). In this review, we focus on their cosmetic and dermocosmetic applications and on providing a global view of their classification, preparation and characterization. CLASSIFICATION OF ORGANOGELS Organogel is a system composed of an organic liquid and a gelator. The organogel classification can be based on the nature of the organic liquids, gelators used as well as their intermolecular interactions. Nature of the organic liquid Organogelator are capable to jellify a broad range of organic liquids. However, it remains difficult to predict the organic liquid appropriate for a particular gelator. Generally, the discovery of gelators is still today spontaneous and is usually followed by investigative screening of different solvent systems potentially suitable with gelation (6, 11). Based on polarity of organic liquids, we can classify them in two main groups: polar and apolar. A variety of polar organic liquids has been studied for the preparation of organogels such as 1,2-dichloroethane, dichloromethane, chloroform, ether (diethyl ether, diphenyl ether), 1-4-dioxane, esters (ethyl formate, ethyl acetate, ethyl maloate), ketones (acetone, methyl ethyl ketone), amides (N,N-dimethylformamide, N,N-dimethylacetamide), dimethyl sulfoxide, N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone, acetonitrile, carboxylic acids, acetic anhydride, amines, trimethylchlorosilane, trifluoroethanol, glycerol, propylene glycol (18, 19). Besides polar liquids, apolar liquids are also good solvents for organogel obtaining. These liquids include alkanes, cycloalkanes, aromatic compounds, natural or synthetic oils. Among them, oils are the most frequent used organic solvent for cosmetic products because of their availability, low price, compatibility, emollient property and high spreading ability. Some examples are vegetable oils, such as jojoba, avocado, sweet almond, soybean, apricot, olive, pumpkin seed, soybean, karanja, castor and liquid fraction of shea butter; mineral oils such as vaseline oil; synthetic oils such as triglycerides (for example caprylic/capric triglycerides), isopropyl myristate, 2-ethylhexyl palmitate, cetearyl octanoate hydrogenated isoparaffin, isononyl isononanoate; volatile or nonvolatile silicone oils and fluorinated oils (20-24). Nature of organogelators Organogelator can be classified into two groups based on their molecular weight: low molecular-mass organogelators (LMOGs) and polymer organogelators (POGs). LMOGs A LMOG corresponds to a relatively small organic molecule with molecular weight of less than 2000 g/mol, and more particularly less than 500 g/mol, capable of gelling organic H&PC Today - Household and Personal Care Today Vol. 10(3) May/June 2015 Figure 1. Schematic representation and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) micrographs of HSA (intermolecular hydrogen bonds, Van der Waals interactions) and DBS (intra- and intermolecular hydrogen bonds, π-π stacking) organization in organic medium (25, 28). liquids, forming a supramolecular three-dimensional network (16). Their potential advantages over POGs could be their biocompatibility, lower toxicity, easy to prepare, strong physical stability, greater flexibility of use and gelling capacity even in very small quantities (> 1 wt%) (6, 11, 25). The LMOGs can be separated into “classes” according to chemical structure, including: alkanes, derivatives of fatty acids, steroid derivatives, anthryl derivatives, amino acid types, amide or urea compounds, inorganic and organometallic compounds. Derived from these categories, several chemical compounds are widely used as organogelators for cosmetic formulations for example, 12-hydroxystearic acid (HSA), 1,3: 2,4-di-O-benzylidèneD-sorbitol (DBS), sterols, lecithin, mono- and diglycerides, lecithin mixtures with sorbitan esters, fatty acids, fatty alcohols, waxes and wax esters. In these cases, the gelled organic liquids are usually vegetable, animal or mineral and/ or synthetic oils or waxes (26, 27). LMOGs are often used for the formulation of physical gels. In contrast to chemical gels, in which the network is maintained by covalent bond, physical gels of LMOGs are thermoreversible, appearing as a gel below a critical temperature, such as sol-to-gel phase transition temperature (gelation temperature, Tgel), and as a solution above it. The driving force for the initiation of gelation and formation of their networks can be weak, non-covalent interactions like Van der Waals interactions, π-π stacking, intermolecular hydrogen bonds, ionic or organometallic bonds or (almost always) a combination of these interaction (25, 28) (Figure 1). Based on the kinetic properties of aggregates, organogels of LMOGs can be classified into two groups: “strong” organogel (solid fiber network) and “weak” organogel (fluid fiber network) (Figure 2). of gelator molecules in the organic medium results in the formation of aggregates. The junction zones, crystallized microdomains, are responsible for the highly non-Newtonian behavior of “strong” physical gels (Figure 2a) (11, 29). “Strong” organogels can be obtained by using different LMOGs with appropriate solvents: fatty and amino acids, organometallic compounds, steroids, amide- or urea compounds, alkanes (11). “Weak” organogels “Weak” organogels (flux-matrix organogels) are made of transient three-dimensional networks exhibiting a liquid-like “Strong” organogels “Strong” organogels are materials made of permanent three-dimensional networks exhibiting a solid-like, viscoelastic, mechanical behavior as a result of their thermoreversibility or the existence of Tgel and Tmelt (melting temperature or gel-to-sol phase transition temperature). They are generally prepared by dissolving the gelator in a heated solvent, following a decrease in temperature below the gelator solubility limit. Consequently, cooperative intermolecular interactions H&PC Today - Household and Personal Care Today Vol. 10(3) May/June 2015 2A 2B Figure 2. Nature of organogel networks structure. 2a “strong” organogel with a permanent solid-like network where junction points are spatially extended (pseudo) crystalline microdomains. 2b “weak” organogel with transient networks in which the junction points are entanglements or spatially limited organized microdomaines, characterized by chain breaking/ recombination (11). 17 viscoelastic behavior. Fluid matrices are formed as a result of the reorganization of surfactant molecules into monoor bilayer cylindrical aggregates upon the incorporation of polar solvents into organic solutions of surfactants. The transient networks are characterized by the continuous breaking and recombination of the constituent rods, and are also referred to as “worm-like” or “polymer-like” networks (Figure 2b). Some typical examples for this system are lecithin and sorbitan monostearate, glyceryl fatty acid ester which have gained an increasing interest in pharmaceutical science (11). POGs POGs are high molecular-mass molecules which are capable of gelling organic solvents by the formation of physical supramolecular crosslinking points. Such crosslinking points are formed by a conformational change in the polymer backbone or by the addition of crosslinking agents. In comparison to LMOGs, POGs are just of a limited number and their organogelation abilities are relatively lower. However, gels developed by polymeric organogelators generally have lower Tgel and comparatively higher gel strength when compared with organogel obtained with LMOGs (30). Recently, interest arises in development of a novel class of polymer organogelator, where LMOGs are combined to conventional polymers, forming supramolecular selfassembling polymer organogelators. According to Suzuki et al., POGs can be classified into three categories: supramolecular crosslinkable polymers, polymer-crosslinking agent organogelators and LMOG-incorporated polymer organogelators (25). Supramolecular crosslinkable polymer organogelators The polymer chains naturally entangle, forming a threedimensional network which immobilizes the solvent. In this structure, physical crosslinking points are usually maintained by helical conformations due to their relatively strong interactions. This is the case of polyethylene in mineral oil (Plastibase®), poly(methyl methacrylate) in propylene glycol, polystyrenes in chloroform, carbon tetrachloride or benzene, etc. (11, 25). Polymer-crosslinking agent organogelators The polymer itself is not a gelator of the organic liquid. However, upon the addition of the low molecular weight crosslinkers, the supramolecular crosslinking junction is formed rapidly. One example for this system is poly(allylamine) (PAA) which cannot jellify any tested organic liquids, but shows to be an excellent organogelator for alcohols ROH (R = C1–C8) and 1-methyl2-pyrrolidonealcohols when CO2 was bubbled into this solution. The organogels obtained were stable for more than two months. In this case, through the interaction between PAA and CO2, the allylammonium (NH3+) and allylcarbamate (NHCO2-) moieties were formed, and they functioned as crosslinking points (25). Another example is photoreversible and thermoreversible supramolecular gels consisting of poly(tri-methylene iminium trifluorosulfonimide) (PTMI) as the polymer and a bifunctional benzoxazylpyridine (bzpybox) ligand with an azobenzene group as the crosslinker, mediated by complementary hydrogen bonds. The suspension of PTMI and the crosslinker in acetonitrile forms a homogenous clear solution as 18 heated up, and transforms into a transparent gel upon cooling to the room temperature (25). LMOG-incorporated polymer organogelators Self-assembling polymer has been designed by introducing LMOGs into conventional polymers. LMOGs function as a gelation-causing segment form the supramolecular polymer, while the polymer backbone inhibits crystallization of the gelator and provides large spaces for the immobilization of solvents. Introduction methods for LMOGs into polymers are achieved by two strategies: copolymerization and polymer reaction. For example, L-Ile-PDMS obtained by the copolymerization of poly(dimethylsiloxaneco-hydridomethylsiloxane) (polymer) with allyl-containing Lisoleucine LMOG, presented a good organogelation ability for many organic liquids, such as alkanes, alcohols (methanol, ethanol, 1-propanol, 2-propanol, 1-butanol), ethyl acetate, ketones, aromatic solvents, polar solvents (dimethylformamide, dimethylacetamide, dimethylsulfoxyde, pyridine) (25). Nature of interaction In literature, organogels are divided into two categories based on the nature of organogelator intermolecular interactions: physical organogels and chemical organogels. Physical organogels Physical organogels are three-dimensional networks which are held together by non-covalent bonds such as hydrogen bonds, π-π stacking, Van der Waals, electrostatic and coordination interactions. They are thermoreversible, which means there is Tgel, above which the system is a solution of polymer in organic liquid, whereas cooling the hot solution phase results in gel phase (21-29). All of the organogels of LMOGs and the majority of the organogel of POGs are physical gels (25). Chemical organogels Chemical organogels are formed by entrapment of organic liquid in a chemical crosslinking network structure. The network is maintained by covalent bond; therefore it is more robust and resistant to physical deformations. 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