Mechanoresponsive Drug Release from a Flexible, Tissue‐Adherent, Hybrid Hydrogel Actuator

Author:

Mendez Keegan12,Whyte William1,Freedman Benjamin R.345,Fan Yiling6,Varela Claudia E.1,Singh Manisha1,Cintron-Cruz Juan C.34,Rothenbücher Sandra E.1,Li Jianyu7,Mooney David J.34,Roche Ellen T.126ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Medical Engineering and Science Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge MA 01239 USA

2. Harvard‐MIT Program in Health Sciences and Technology Cambridge MA 02139 USA

3. John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences Harvard University Cambridge MA 01238 USA

4. Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering Harvard University Cambridge MA 02138 USA

5. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Boston MA 02215 USA

6. Department of Mechanical Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge MA 02139 USA

7. Department of Mechanical Engineering McGill University Montreal QC H3A 0C3 Canada

Abstract

AbstractSoft robotic technologies for therapeutic biomedical applications require conformal and atraumatic tissue coupling that is amenable to dynamic loading for effective drug delivery or tissue stimulation. This intimate and sustained contact offers vast therapeutic opportunities for localized drug release. Herein, a new class of hybrid hydrogel actuator (HHA) that facilitates enhanced drug delivery is introduced. The multi‐material soft actuator can elicit a tunable mechanoresponsive release of charged drug from its alginate/acrylamide hydrogel layer with temporal control. Dosing control parameters include actuation magnitude, frequency, and duration. The actuator can safely adhere to tissue via a flexible, drug‐permeable adhesive bond that can withstand dynamic device actuation. Conformal adhesion of the hybrid hydrogel actuator to tissue leads to improved mechanoresponsive spatial delivery of the drug. Future integration of this hybrid hydrogel actuator with other soft robotic assistive technologies can enable a synergistic, multi‐pronged treatment approach for the treatment of disease.

Funder

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science

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