Drug – bio-affecting and body treating compositions – Designated organic active ingredient containing – Heavy metal containing doai
Reexamination Certificate
1999-09-01
2004-01-06
Pak, John (Department: 1616)
Drug, bio-affecting and body treating compositions
Designated organic active ingredient containing
Heavy metal containing doai
C514S772000, C514S777000, C514S778000, C514S779000, C514S780000, C514S781000, C514S782000, C514S783000, C514S944000, C514S946000, C514S964000, C514S975000, C424S400000, C424S484000, C424S485000, C424S488000, C424S641000, C424S643000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06673835
ABSTRACT:
This invention relates to compositions and methods for delivering minor effective amounts of a substance to the blood in a body.
More particularly, the invention relates to a method and composition for delivering a minor effective amount of a substance to the nasal membrane.
In a further respect, the invention relates to a composition which maintains zinc in an ionic state for delivery to the nasal membrane.
In another respect, the invention relates to a composition which maintains a substance in direct contact with the nasal membrane for an extended period of time.
The common cold is one of the most frequently occurring human illnesses and is responsible for substantial morbidity and economic loss. Ionic zinc is a known effective anti-rhinovirus agent in vitro and in vivo.
In one in vivo study reported in 1991, a double-blind clinical trial demonstrated the effectiveness of orally administered zinc gluconate/glycerine lozenges. The lozenges used in the study contained twenty-three milligrams of zinc provided by 179 milligrams of zinc gluconate trihydrate which provided a 13.1 millimolar ionic zinc concentration in the oral cavity. During the study, lozenges administered at two hour intervals resulted in a forty-two percent reduction in mean cold duration and in a marked reduction in both the number and severity of symptoms if treatment with the lozenges was initiated within two days of the onset of cold symptoms. A second study reported in 1992 (Zarmebo J. E., Godfrey J. C., Godfrey N.,
J Pharm Sci
1992; 81: 128-130) confirmed the findings of the 1991 study. Soon after the results of these studies became widely known, a number of companies began marketing their own versions of the zinc lozenge cold remedy.
While zinc lozenges are usually beneficial in treating a cold, the lozenges have several drawbacks. First, the majority of zinc in a zinc gluconate lozenge is released in the oral cavity. The principal site, however, of antiviral activity is believed to be the nasal cavity (Novick S. G., Godfrey J. C., Godfrey N. J., Wilder H. R.,
Medical Hypothesis
1996; 46: 295-302). It is surmised that some ionic zinc released by a lozenge in the oral cavity makes its way to nasal passages where the zinc binds to viral ICAM-1 receptors and inhibits rhinovirus from binding to and infecting nasal mucosal cells. The difficulty encountered by ionic zinc or another substance in a lozenge in attempting to travel from the oral cavity to the nasal cavity limits the effectiveness of lozenges. Further, in a congested individual the route from the oral cavity to the nasal cavity may be completely blocked, rendering the lozenges ineffective.
A second disadvantage associated with zinc lozenges is the production of significant side effects. In one study, twenty percent of the subjects complained of nausea and eight percent complained of bad taste reactions (Novick S. G., Godfrey J. C., Godfrey N. J., Wilder H. R.,
Medical Hypothesis
1996; 46: 295-302). With respect to the nausea, it is well established that excessive zinc in the intestinal tract interferes with copper absorption and that preventing the absorption by the body of sufficient quantities of copper can lead to a variety of undesirable pathological states. The overuse of zinc lozenges may contribute to copper depletion.
We have discovered a novel gel composition and method for delivering ionic (negatively charged) zinc and other active substances to the nasal epithelial membrane without encountering the disadvantages normally associated with lozenges. The composition maintains ionic zinc or another active substance in direct contact with the nasal membrane, preferably for an extended period of time of at least one-quarter hour, and delivers zinc or another active substance into the nasal membrane and into blood in the nasal membrane.
When the gel composition is a homeopathic composition, it includes from 75% to 99.999% by weight of at least one carrier and a minor effective amount of an active substance. The minor effective amount in the gel composition includes from 0.0000001% to 5.0% by weight of the active substance.
When the gel composition is a pharmaceutical composition, it includes from 75% to 99.999% by weight of at least one carrier and a minor effective amount of an active substance. The minor effective amount includes from 0.0000001% to 10.0% by weight in the composition of the active substance. As would be appreciated by those of skill in the art, small concentrations of active substances may not be deemed homeopathic but can still be beneficial to the body. Such “non-homeopathic” concentrations of an acitve substance are herein deemed to produce a pharmaceutical composition.
When the gel composition is a homeopathic composition and zinc is the active substance, the composition includes from 0.185% to 2.8% by weight (from about 4 mM to 60 mM), preferably 0.9% to 2.0% by weight (from about 20 mM to 44 mM), zinc gluconate. Each 0.1% by weight zinc gluconate in the composition produces a concentration of approximately 0.014% by weight ionic zinc (i.e., of about 2.2 mM ionic zinc). At least a 4 mM concentration of ionic zinc is preferred in the gel composition to insure that a sufficiently high concentration of ionic zinc is produced by the composition at the interface between the composition and the nasal membrane.
The composition has a viscosity in the range of 2,500 to 40,000 centipoise, preferably 5,000 to 20,000 centipoise. The viscosity of the composition is important because it facilitates maintenance of the composition in the nasal cavity in contact with the nasal membrane or with mucous on the membrane. When the viscosity is less than about 2,500 centipoise, the composition tends to be drawn by gravity out of the nasal cavity. If the viscosity is in excess of about 40,000 centipoise, the thickness of the composition interferes with the diffusion of ionic zinc through the composition to the nasal membrane. During the development of the composition of the invention, nasal sprays were considered and discarded because the low viscosity of the liquids comprising such sprays allows the liquids to flow under gravity out of the nasal cavity, preventing the sprays from contacting the nasal membrane for an extended period of time. The effectiveness of a nasal spray usually substantially dissipates in less than five minutes. Similarly, applying the composition on a swab or nose plug is not believed efficient because the swab or nose plug, which may for example be made of cotton or of a sponge material retain the composition and interferes with the delivery of an additional supply of the composition into contact with the nasal membrane following dissipation of the composition which is on the surface of the swab or plug and is in direct contact with the nasal membrane.
As noted, nasal sprays were avoided during development of the invention. By way of background with respect to zinc—bearing nasal sprays, U.S. Pat. No. 5,688,32 concerns antiallergic spray preparations and discloses and claims a method for the treatment of an allergic condition in which a spray solution is applied to the eye or respiratory tract of a mammal having the allergic condition. The spray solution includes a non-toxic, anti-allergy effective amount of ionic zinc in a concentration below that which causes irritation to mucus membranes. The majority of the ionic zinc in the spray solution is unchelated zinc and is in the form of free ionic solution, wherein the solution has a zinc ion content of between about 0.002 and about 0.12%(w/v). The allergic condition treated with the spray solution can comprises hay-fever and asthma. The spray solution can be selected from the group consisting of essentially aqueous and essentially saline solutions; can have a zinc ion content of about 0.04% (w/v); can comprise a mineral acid salt of zinc as solute; can comprise a solute selected from the group consisting of zinc sulfate and zinc chloride; can be dispensed in aliquots of about either 0.05 to 0.5 ml or 0.2 ml; and/or, can include at least one other pharmaceutically acc
Davidson Robert Steven
Hensley Charles
Pak John
Snell & Wilmer L.L.P.
Zicam LLC
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