Department of Biomedical Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, 10900 Euclid Ave, Cleveland, OH 44106, USA.
J Control Release. 2010 Nov 1;147(3):350-8. doi: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2010.08.020. Epub 2010 Aug 20.
In situ forming drug delivery implants offer an attractive alternative to pre-formed implant devices for local drug delivery due to their ability to deliver fragile drugs, simple manufacturing process, and less invasive placement. However, the clinical translation of these systems has been hampered, in part, by poor correlation between in vitro and in vivo drug release profiles. To better understand this effect, the behavior of poly(D,l-lactide-co-glycolide) (PLGA) in situ forming implants was examined in vitro and in vivo after subcutaneous injection as well as injection into necrotic, non-necrotic, and ablated tumor. Implant formation was quantified noninvasively using an ultrasound imaging technique. Drug release of a model drug agent, fluorescein, was correlated with phase inversion in different environments. Results demonstrated that burst drug release in vivo was greater than in vitro for all implant formulations. Drug release from implants in varying in vivo environments was fastest in ablated tumor followed by implants in non-necrotic tumor, in subcutaneous tissue, and finally in necrotic tumor tissue with 50% of the loading drug mass released in 0.7, 0.9, 9.7, and 12.7h respectively. Implants in stiffer ablated and non-necrotic tumor tissue showed much faster drug release than implants in more compliant subcutaneous and necrotic tumor environments. Finally, implant formation examined using ultrasound confirmed that in vivo the process of precipitation (phase inversion) was directly proportional to drug release. These findings suggest that not only is drug release dependent on implant formation but that external environmental effects, such as tissue mechanical properties, may explain the differences seen between in vivo and in vitro drug release from in situ forming implants.
原位形成药物输送植入物由于能够输送脆弱的药物、制造工艺简单以及侵入性较小,因此为局部药物输送提供了一种有吸引力的替代方案,优于预成型植入物装置。然而,这些系统的临床转化受到了阻碍,部分原因是体外和体内药物释放曲线之间缺乏相关性。为了更好地理解这种影响,研究了聚(D,L-丙交酯-共-乙交酯)(PLGA)原位形成植入物在皮下注射以及注射到坏死、非坏死和消融肿瘤后的体内和体外行为。使用超声成像技术非侵入性地量化了植入物的形成。将模型药物荧光素的药物释放与不同环境中的相转变相关联。结果表明,所有植入物配方的体内突释药物释放都大于体外。在不同的体内环境中,从植入物中释放药物的速度最快是在消融肿瘤中,其次是在非坏死肿瘤中,在皮下组织中,最后是在坏死肿瘤组织中,分别在 0.7、0.9、9.7 和 12.7h 释放了 50%的加载药物质量。在更坚硬的消融和非坏死肿瘤组织中的植入物比在更具顺应性的皮下和坏死肿瘤环境中的植入物显示出更快的药物释放。最后,使用超声检查的植入物形成证实,在体内沉淀(相转变)过程与药物释放直接成正比。这些发现表明,药物释放不仅依赖于植入物的形成,而且外部环境因素,如组织力学特性,可能解释了在体和体外从原位形成植入物释放药物之间的差异。