PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2026

Development of hyaluronic acid-based nanocomposite eye drops: A synergistic platform for enhanced ocular delivery of acetazolamide

Falcone G, Formica ML, et al.

International Journal of Pharmaceutics: X

Università degli Studi di Salerno, CONICET, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This study developed hyaluronic acid-based nanocomposite eye drops for topical ocular delivery of acetazolamide as a potential glaucoma treatment. Acetazolamide nanocrystals were incorporated into hyaluronic acid hydrogels to create formulations with improved colloidal stability, acceptable ophthalmic pH and osmolarity, pseudoplastic flow behaviour, enhanced mucoadhesion, and sustained drug release. The optimized formulation contained hyaluronic acid 1.25% w/v and acetazolamide nanocrystals 5% w/v, preserving nanocrystal integrity while improving dispersion stability relative to aqueous nanosuspensions. In vitro release showed a biphasic profile with an initial burst followed by prolonged diffusion-controlled release, while in vivo rabbit studies showed no irritation or ocular damage after instillation. The optimized nanocomposite hydrogel produced a significant and prolonged reduction in intraocular pressure compared with normal saline and tended to outperform the commercial brinzolamide reference, while using a lower acetazolamide dose than prior nanocrystal-only formulations. Overall, the paper presents a synergistic ocular drug delivery platform that combines nanocrystal-enhanced drug availability with hydrogel-mediated retention and mucoadhesion.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

UniVert

Mucoadhesive detachment-force testing was performed using a CellScale UniVert 1 kN Texture Analyzer equipped with a 10 N load cell. To mimic ocular mucoadhesion, a 10% w/v mucin suspension was spread onto an agarose mold and allowed to adsorb, after which 150 μL of each hydrogel formulation was distributed on the mucin-coated surface. The UniVert probe, fitted with a double-sided adhesive disk, was lowered into contact, a constant compression force of 250 mN was applied, and the probe was then raised at 0.8 mm/s while CellScale Data Analysis Software recorded detachment force. The UniVert measurements showed that the acetazolamide nanocrystal-loaded hyaluronic acid hydrogel had higher detachment force than the nanocrystal water dispersion, increasing from 0.55 ± 0.017 N for WD_AZM-NC(5) to 0.66 ± 0.006 N for HA_AZM-NC(5). These data were important because they demonstrated that embedding acetazolamide nanocrystals in the hyaluronic acid matrix improved formulation mucoadhesion and supported the study’s conclusion that the nanocomposite hydrogel could prolong ocular residence and enhance topical drug delivery.
AUTHORS

Giovanni Falcone, María Lina Formica, Hamoudi Ghassan Awde Alfonso, Julieta Ribotta, Luis Ignacio Tartara, Chiara Amante, Rita Patrizia Aquino, Pasquale Del Gaudio, Santiago Daniel Palma, Paola Russo.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

International Journal of Pharmaceutics: X

YEAR

2026

INSTITUTIONS

Università degli Studi di Salerno, CONICET, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba

COUNTRIES

Argentina, Italy

INSTRUMENT USED

UniVert

TESTING METHODS
RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

Drug Screening & Drug Delivery MechanicsHydrogel Mechanical TestingOphthalmic Biomechanics & Corneal Tissue Engineering

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