PLGA/PVA hydrogel composites for long-term inflammation control following s.c. implantation
Autor: | Fotios Papadimitrakopoulos, Upkar Bhardwaj, Radhakrishna Sura, Diane J. Burgess |
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Rok vydání: | 2009 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.medical_specialty Time Factors Pharmaceutical Science Inflammation engineering.material Dosage form Rats Sprague-Dawley chemistry.chemical_compound Subcutaneous Tissue Coating Polylactic Acid-Polyglycolic Acid Copolymer Hydrogel composite medicine Animals Lactic Acid Microparticle Dexamethasone Drug Implants Anti-Inflammatory Agents Non-Steroidal Hydrogels Microspheres Surgery Rats PLGA chemistry Polyvinyl Alcohol engineering Implant medicine.symptom Polyglycolic Acid Biomedical engineering medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | International journal of pharmaceutics. 384(1-2) |
ISSN: | 1873-3476 |
Popis: | Dexamethasone loaded PLGA microsphere/PVA hydrogel composites were investigated as an outer drug-eluting coating for implantable devices to provide protection against the foreign body response. Two populations of microspheres were prepared: 25 kDa PLGA microspheres which had a typical triphasic release profile extending over 30-33 days; and 75 kDa PLGA microspheres which showed minimal release for the first 25 days and then increased to release over 80-85 days. Incorporation of the microspheres in the composites only slightly altered the release profile. Composites containing 25 kDa microspheres released dexamethasone over 30-35 days while composites containing combinations of 25 and 75 kDa microspheres in equal amounts released over 90-95 days. Pharmacodynamic studies showed that composites containing only 25 kDa microspheres provided protection against the inflammatory response for 1 month, however, a delayed tissue reaction developed after exhaustion of dexamethasone. This demonstrated that sustained release of the anti-inflammatory agent is required over the entire implant lifetime to control inflammation and prevent fibrosis. Composites fabricated using combinations of 25 kDa and 75 kDa microspheres controlled the tissue reaction for 90 days. This strategy of combining different microsphere populations in the same composite coating can be used to tune the release profiles for the desired extent and duration of release. Such composites offer an innovative solution to control the foreign body response at the tissue-device interface. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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