Islamabad, Feb 2 : According to a recent study, there
is a new mechanism of drug release using 3D superhydrophobic materials that
utilizes air as a removable barrier to control the rate at which drug is
released.
Boston University (BU) graduate student Stefan Yohe, under the
mentorship of Mark Grinstaff , PhD, BU professor of biomedical engineering and
chemistry, and Yolonda Colson, MD, PhD, director of the Dana-Farber Cancer
Institute/Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) Cancer Center, prepared drug-loaded
superhydrophobic meshes from biocompatible polymers using an electrospinning
fabrication method.
By monitoring drug release in aqueous solution and
mesh performance in cytotoxicity assays, the team demonstrated that the rate of
drug release correlates with the removal of the air pocket within the material,
and that the rate of drug release can be maintained over an extended
period.
"The ability to control drug release over a 2-3 month period is
of significant clinical interest in thoracic surgery with applications in pain
management and in the prevention of tumor recurrence after surgical resection,"
said Colson. Colson is also a thoracic surgeon at BWH with an active practice
focused on the treatment of lung cancer patients.
This approach along
with the design requirements for creating 3D superhydrophobic drug-loaded
materials, the authors write, should facilitate further exploration and
evaluation of these drug delivery materials in a variety of cancer and
non-cancer applications.
Ends
SA/EN
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» New drug release mechanism utilizes 3-d superhydrophobic materials
New drug release mechanism utilizes 3-d superhydrophobic materials
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