Affiliation:
1. School of Pharmacy, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, York House, Dublin, Ireland
Abstract
Abstract
Objective
There is a growing interest in developing bioresponsive drug delivery systems to achieve greater control over drug release than can be achieved with the conventional diffusion controlled polymeric delivery systems. While a number of such systems have been studied for oral or parenteral delivery, little or no work has been done on bioresponsive delivery systems for inhalation. Using the raised elastase levels present at sites of lung inflammation as a proof-of-concept model, we endeavoured to develop a prototype of inhalable elastase sensitive microparticles (ESMs).
Methods
Microparticles degradable by the enzyme elastase were formed by crosslinking the polymer alginate in the presence of an elastase substrate, elastin, using Ca+2 ions and subsequent spray drying.
Key findings
The bioresponsive release of a protein cargo in the presence of elastase demonstrated the enzyme-specific degradability of the particles. The microparticles showed favorable properties such as high drug encapsulation and good powder dispersibility. Potential polymer toxicity in the lungs was assessed by impinging the microparticles on Calu-3 cell monolayers and assessing changes in transepithelial permeability and induction of cytokine release. The microparticles displayed no toxic or immunogenic effects.
Conclusions
With a manufacturing method that is amenable to scale-up, the ability to be aerosolised efficiently from a first-generation inhaler device, enzyme-specific degradability and lack of toxicity, the ESMs show significant promise as pulmonary drug carriers.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Pharmaceutical Science,Pharmacology
Cited by
22 articles.
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