Physical Characterization to Improve Scalability and Potential of Anesthetic-Loaded Nanodroplets

Author:

Ting Siulam Ginni12,Lea-Banks Harriet1,Hynynen Kullervo123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Physical Sciences Platform, Sunnybrook Research Institute, Toronto, ON M4N 3M5, Canada

2. Department of Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 1A1, Canada

3. Institute of Biomedical Imaging, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 1A1, Canada

Abstract

Drug-loaded perfluorocarbon nanodroplets (NDs) can be activated non-invasively by focused ultrasound (FUS) and allow for precise drug-delivery. Anesthetic-loaded NDs and transcranial FUS have previously achieved targeted neuromodulation. To assess the clinical potential of anesthetic-loaded NDs, in depth physical characterization and investigation of storage strategies and triggered-activation is necessary. Pentobarbital-loaded decafluorobutane nanodroplets (PBNDs) with a Definity-derived lipid shell (237 nm; 4.08 × 109 particles/mL) were fabricated and assessed. Change in droplet stability, concentration, and drug-release efficacy were tested for PBNDs frozen at −80 °C over 4 weeks. PBND diameter and the polydispersity index of thawed droplets remained consistent up to 14 days frozen. Cryo-TEM images revealed NDs begin to lose circularity at 7 days, and by 14 days, perfluorocarbon dissolution and lipid fragmentation occurred. The level of acoustic response and drug release decreases through prolonged storage. PBNDs showed no hemolytic activity at clinically relevant concentrations and conditions. At increasing sonication pressures, liquid PBNDs vaporized into gas microbubbles, and acoustic activity at the second harmonic frequency (2 f0) peaked at lower pressures than the subharmonic frequency (1/2 f0). Definity-based PBNDs have been thoroughly characterized, cryo-TEM has been shown to be suitable to image the internal structure of volatile NDs, and PBNDs can be reliably stored at −80 °C for future use up to 7 days without significant degradation, loss of acoustic response, or reduction in ultrasound-triggered drug release.

Funder

National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering of the National Institutes of Health

Canadian Institutes for Health Research

Temerty Chair in Focused Ultrasound Research at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre

University of Toronto

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Pharmaceutical Science

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