Pharmaceutics

Comparing Two Intestinal Absorption Helpers for Oral Delivery of Large Molecules: Salcaprozate Sodium (SNAC) vs. Sodium Caprate (C10)

Updated

Abstract

Both salcaprozate sodium (SNAC) and sodium caprate (C) show only single-digit increases in oral bioavailability of macromolecules in human trials.

  • SNAC and C have been studied for over 30 years as for oral drug delivery.
  • SNAC was traditionally thought to increase permeability through enhanced lipophilicity from macromolecule complexation.
  • Recent findings suggest that SNAC may also elevate pH and inhibit pepsin in the stomach, potentially aiding oral delivery.
  • Both enhancers exhibit variable effects on the intestinal epithelium, with no clear evidence that one is superior to the other.
  • SNAC is generally recognized as safe and FDA-approved, while C has a long history of use as a food additive.
  • Clinical trials have not demonstrated co-absorption of microorganisms with SNAC or C, and long-term safety beyond six months remains unassessed.

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What this is

  • Salcaprozate sodium (SNAC) and sodium caprate (C) are () for oral delivery of macromolecules.
  • Both agents have been tested extensively, yet their mechanisms of action and comparative efficacy remain debated.
  • SNAC is FDA-approved as a medical food, while C has a long history of use as a food additive.
  • This review evaluates their safety, efficacy, and mechanisms based on clinical and preclinical studies.

Essence

  • SNAC and C both enhance oral bioavailability of macromolecules, but evidence does not convincingly favor one over the other. Their mechanisms involve complex interactions with intestinal epithelium, yet safety profiles and clinical experiences differ.

Key takeaways

  • SNAC and C both improve oral bioavailability of macromolecules, achieving less than 5% in most cases, with mean values closer to ~1%.
  • SNAC has a broader clinical experience and an approved vitamin B product, while C has demonstrated a long history of safety as a food additive.
  • The mechanisms of action for both agents remain unclear, with SNAC's proposed mechanism involving local pH elevation and C's mechanism linked to tight junction modulation.

Caveats

  • The evidence for the efficacy of both SNAC and C is variable, with many studies showing high intra-subject variability in oral bioavailability.
  • Long-term safety data for both agents remains limited, particularly regarding repeated dosing beyond six months.
  • The mechanisms of action are still debated, with insufficient direct evidence to conclusively determine their specific pathways.

Definitions

  • Intestinal permeation enhancers (PEs): Compounds that improve the absorption of drugs across the intestinal barrier, often used for macromolecules.

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Funding

Competing interests

In the past two years, D.B. consulted for on oral peptide delivery at Sanofi, AstraZeneca/MedImmune, and Boehringer-Ingelheim. Sanofi (D.B., E.F.), Gattefosse (D.B.), and Nuritas (D.B.) provided research grant funding. The funding sponsors played no role in the article.
PubMed

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