Soft Injectable Sutures for Dose‐Controlled and Continuous Drug Delivery

Author:

Alsaedi Mossab K.12ORCID,Lone Omar13,Nejad Hojatollah Rezaei145,Das Riddha146,Owyeung Rachel E.14,Del‐Rio‐Ruiz Ruben14,Sonkusale Sameer1247ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Nano Lab Advanced Technology Laboratory Tufts University Medford MA 02155 USA

2. Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering Tufts University Medford MA 02155 USA

3. School of Engineering Zurich University of Applied Sciences Winterthur 8400 Switzerland

4. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Tufts University Medford MA 02155 USA

5. Anodyne Nanotech, Inc Boston MA 02118 USA

6. Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston MA 02114 USA

7. Department of Biomedical Engineering Tufts University Medford MA 02155 USA

Abstract

AbstractTransdermal drug delivery offers a promising alternative to traditional methods such as oral ingestion and hypodermic injection. Hypodermic injections are painful, while oral ingestion requires higher doses due to enzymatic degradation and poor absorption. While microneedles address the pain issue, they are limited to delivering small amounts of drugs and can be impractical due to peeling off with motion and sweat. Herein, this work proposes soft injectables using drug‐carrying sutures for painless and localized sustained delivery in the dermis. These sutures can remain in place during delivery and are suitable for all skin types. Surgical sutures can also serve as open capillary microfluidic channels carrying drug from a wearable drug reservoir to enable long‐term (weeks to months) transdermal drug delivery. The experiments focus on delivering 5‐fluorouracil (5‐FU), a cancer drug, and rhodamine B, a drug model. A fixed‐length suture of 60 cm delivers 0.43 mg of 5‐flurouracil in 15 min. The experiments also demonstrate a continuous drug delivery of rhodamine B for over 8 weeks at a rate of 0.0195 mL h−1. The results highlight that soft injectable sutures are promising candidates for long‐term sustained delivery of varying quantities of drugs over weeks period compared to hypodermic injection, oral ingestion, or microneedles.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Materials Chemistry,Polymers and Plastics,Biomaterials,Bioengineering,Biotechnology

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