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A Foilized Polyethylene Pouch for the Prevention of Transmission of HIV from Mother to Child.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Malkin, R; Howard, C
Published in: The open biomedical engineering journal
January 2012

Many children become HIV+ due to mother-to-child transmission, a risk that can be largely eliminated if infants ingest antiretroviral (ARV) medications immediately after birth. As most mothers in Africa deliver at home, the ARV must be provided at their last antenatal visit, sometimes months before birth. No current drug delivery system allows the mother to store the medication at home long enough to be effective. We propose a preserving, foilized, polyethylene pouch to be pre-dosed and sealed by a pharmacist for later delivery to the newborn.Pouches were filled with 0.6 ml of Nevirapine (NVP). Thirty-three pouches were immediately studied to measure the impact of medication handling (oxygen, light, filling and sealing the pouches). The remaining samples were stored for up to one year at three storage conditions (25°C/60%RH, 30°C/65%RH, and 40°C/75%RH). Every two months, moisture loss, preservative concentration, impurity concentrations and NVP concentration were measured. Flora and fauna challenges were conducted.THE POUCH NEARLY ELIMINATED MOISTURE LOSS: pouches lost less than 0.7% of their weight over twelve months. As expected, exposing the medication to light, oxygen, and handling significantly affected the sacrificial preservative concentrations (Propyl paraben dropped 38%, Methyl paraben dropped 12% at time point zero). However, after the initial time point, preservative levels were stable in the package over twelve months under all storage conditions (4.1% average concentration drop), leaving sufficient preservatives to protect the medication. The concentration of NVP changed an average of only 1.3% over all storage conditions and times points (maximum 1.4%).We conclude that the foilized polyethylene pouch can preserve NVP, and perhaps other ARV's, for up to one year.

Duke Scholars

Published In

The open biomedical engineering journal

DOI

EISSN

1874-1207

ISSN

1874-1207

Publication Date

January 2012

Volume

6

Start / End Page

92 / 97
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Malkin, R., & Howard, C. (2012). A Foilized Polyethylene Pouch for the Prevention of Transmission of HIV from Mother to Child. The Open Biomedical Engineering Journal, 6, 92–97. https://doi.org/10.2174/1874120701206010092
Malkin, Robert, and Caroline Howard. “A Foilized Polyethylene Pouch for the Prevention of Transmission of HIV from Mother to Child.The Open Biomedical Engineering Journal 6 (January 2012): 92–97. https://doi.org/10.2174/1874120701206010092.
Malkin R, Howard C. A Foilized Polyethylene Pouch for the Prevention of Transmission of HIV from Mother to Child. The open biomedical engineering journal. 2012 Jan;6:92–7.
Malkin, Robert, and Caroline Howard. “A Foilized Polyethylene Pouch for the Prevention of Transmission of HIV from Mother to Child.The Open Biomedical Engineering Journal, vol. 6, Jan. 2012, pp. 92–97. Epmc, doi:10.2174/1874120701206010092.
Malkin R, Howard C. A Foilized Polyethylene Pouch for the Prevention of Transmission of HIV from Mother to Child. The open biomedical engineering journal. 2012 Jan;6:92–97.

Published In

The open biomedical engineering journal

DOI

EISSN

1874-1207

ISSN

1874-1207

Publication Date

January 2012

Volume

6

Start / End Page

92 / 97