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Skin-on-a-Chip Device for Ex Vivo Monitoring of Transdermal Delivery of Drugs—Design, Fabrication, and Testing

To develop proper drug formulations and to optimize the delivery of their active ingredients through the dermal barrier, the Franz diffusion cell system is the most widely used in vitro/ex vivo technique. However, different providers and manufacturers make various types of this equipment (horizontal...

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Autores principales: Lukács, Bence, Bajza, Ágnes, Kocsis, Dorottya, Csorba, Attila, Antal, István, Iván, Kristóf, Laki, András József, Erdő, Franciska
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6781558/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31480652
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics11090445
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author Lukács, Bence
Bajza, Ágnes
Kocsis, Dorottya
Csorba, Attila
Antal, István
Iván, Kristóf
Laki, András József
Erdő, Franciska
author_facet Lukács, Bence
Bajza, Ágnes
Kocsis, Dorottya
Csorba, Attila
Antal, István
Iván, Kristóf
Laki, András József
Erdő, Franciska
author_sort Lukács, Bence
collection PubMed
description To develop proper drug formulations and to optimize the delivery of their active ingredients through the dermal barrier, the Franz diffusion cell system is the most widely used in vitro/ex vivo technique. However, different providers and manufacturers make various types of this equipment (horizontal, vertical, static, flow-through, smaller and larger chambers, etc.) with high variability and not fully comparable and consistent data. Furthermore, a high amount of test drug formulations and large size of diffusion skin surface and membranes are important requirements for the application of these methods. The aim of our study was to develop a novel Microfluidic Diffusion Chamber device and compare it with the traditional techniques. Here the design, fabrication, and a pilot testing of a microfluidic skin-on-a chip device are described. Based on this chip, further developments can also be implemented for industrial purposes to assist the characterization and optimization of drug formulations, dermal pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamic studies. The advantages of our device, beside the low costs, are the small drug and skin consumption, low sample volumes, dynamic arrangement with continuous flow mimicking the dermal circulation, as well as rapid and reproducible results.
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spelling pubmed-67815582019-10-30 Skin-on-a-Chip Device for Ex Vivo Monitoring of Transdermal Delivery of Drugs—Design, Fabrication, and Testing Lukács, Bence Bajza, Ágnes Kocsis, Dorottya Csorba, Attila Antal, István Iván, Kristóf Laki, András József Erdő, Franciska Pharmaceutics Article To develop proper drug formulations and to optimize the delivery of their active ingredients through the dermal barrier, the Franz diffusion cell system is the most widely used in vitro/ex vivo technique. However, different providers and manufacturers make various types of this equipment (horizontal, vertical, static, flow-through, smaller and larger chambers, etc.) with high variability and not fully comparable and consistent data. Furthermore, a high amount of test drug formulations and large size of diffusion skin surface and membranes are important requirements for the application of these methods. The aim of our study was to develop a novel Microfluidic Diffusion Chamber device and compare it with the traditional techniques. Here the design, fabrication, and a pilot testing of a microfluidic skin-on-a chip device are described. Based on this chip, further developments can also be implemented for industrial purposes to assist the characterization and optimization of drug formulations, dermal pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamic studies. The advantages of our device, beside the low costs, are the small drug and skin consumption, low sample volumes, dynamic arrangement with continuous flow mimicking the dermal circulation, as well as rapid and reproducible results. MDPI 2019-09-02 /pmc/articles/PMC6781558/ /pubmed/31480652 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics11090445 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Lukács, Bence
Bajza, Ágnes
Kocsis, Dorottya
Csorba, Attila
Antal, István
Iván, Kristóf
Laki, András József
Erdő, Franciska
Skin-on-a-Chip Device for Ex Vivo Monitoring of Transdermal Delivery of Drugs—Design, Fabrication, and Testing
title Skin-on-a-Chip Device for Ex Vivo Monitoring of Transdermal Delivery of Drugs—Design, Fabrication, and Testing
title_full Skin-on-a-Chip Device for Ex Vivo Monitoring of Transdermal Delivery of Drugs—Design, Fabrication, and Testing
title_fullStr Skin-on-a-Chip Device for Ex Vivo Monitoring of Transdermal Delivery of Drugs—Design, Fabrication, and Testing
title_full_unstemmed Skin-on-a-Chip Device for Ex Vivo Monitoring of Transdermal Delivery of Drugs—Design, Fabrication, and Testing
title_short Skin-on-a-Chip Device for Ex Vivo Monitoring of Transdermal Delivery of Drugs—Design, Fabrication, and Testing
title_sort skin-on-a-chip device for ex vivo monitoring of transdermal delivery of drugs—design, fabrication, and testing
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6781558/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31480652
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics11090445
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