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Small Animal In Situ Drug Delivery Effects via Transdermal Microneedles Array versus Intravenous Injection: A Pilot Observation Based on Photoacoustic Tomography

Intravenous injection is a rapid, low-cost, and direct method that is commonly used to deliver multifarious biotherapeutics and vaccines. However, intravenous injection often causes trauma or tissue injury that requires professional operation. Transdermal drug delivery overcomes the aforementioned d...

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Autores principales: Zhou, Yingying, Huang, Xiazi, Li, Jiyu, Zhu, Ting, Pang, Weiran, Chow, Larry, Nie, Liming, Sun, Lei, Lai, Puxiang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9788625/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36559183
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics14122689
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author Zhou, Yingying
Huang, Xiazi
Li, Jiyu
Zhu, Ting
Pang, Weiran
Chow, Larry
Nie, Liming
Sun, Lei
Lai, Puxiang
author_facet Zhou, Yingying
Huang, Xiazi
Li, Jiyu
Zhu, Ting
Pang, Weiran
Chow, Larry
Nie, Liming
Sun, Lei
Lai, Puxiang
author_sort Zhou, Yingying
collection PubMed
description Intravenous injection is a rapid, low-cost, and direct method that is commonly used to deliver multifarious biotherapeutics and vaccines. However, intravenous injection often causes trauma or tissue injury that requires professional operation. Transdermal drug delivery overcomes the aforementioned defects, and the microneedles (MNs) array is one of the most promising transdermal drug delivery platforms. Timely, precise, and non-invasive monitoring and evaluation of the effects of MNs in transdermal administration is significant to the research of drug efficiency response to specific diseases. In this sense, photoacoustic computed tomography (PACT), which provides wavelength-selective and deep-penetrating optical contrast, could be a promising imaging tool for in situ evaluation of the treatment effects. In this work, we propose the use of PACT to non-invasively assess the effects of real-time drug delivery in glioma tumors through transdermal administration with degradable indocyanine green-loaded hyaluronic acid MNs (ICG-HA-MNs). The outcome is systematically and quantitatively compared with that via intravenous injection. It is found that the photoacoustic signals of ICG in the tumor site express a faster elevation and shorter duration time in the intravenous injection group; by contrast, the photoacoustic signals demonstrate a lower intensity but prolonged duration time in the MNs group. The observed phenomenon indicates faster response but shorter drug duration for intravenous injection, which is in contrast with the lower loading but prolonged performance for transdermal drug delivery with MNs. These results exhibit good consistency with the earlier, common-sense findings reported from other aspects, confirming that PACT can serve as a potential imaging tool to precisely, non-invasively, and quickly evaluate in situ drug delivery effects and provide constructive guidance for the design and fabrication of microneedles.
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spelling pubmed-97886252022-12-24 Small Animal In Situ Drug Delivery Effects via Transdermal Microneedles Array versus Intravenous Injection: A Pilot Observation Based on Photoacoustic Tomography Zhou, Yingying Huang, Xiazi Li, Jiyu Zhu, Ting Pang, Weiran Chow, Larry Nie, Liming Sun, Lei Lai, Puxiang Pharmaceutics Article Intravenous injection is a rapid, low-cost, and direct method that is commonly used to deliver multifarious biotherapeutics and vaccines. However, intravenous injection often causes trauma or tissue injury that requires professional operation. Transdermal drug delivery overcomes the aforementioned defects, and the microneedles (MNs) array is one of the most promising transdermal drug delivery platforms. Timely, precise, and non-invasive monitoring and evaluation of the effects of MNs in transdermal administration is significant to the research of drug efficiency response to specific diseases. In this sense, photoacoustic computed tomography (PACT), which provides wavelength-selective and deep-penetrating optical contrast, could be a promising imaging tool for in situ evaluation of the treatment effects. In this work, we propose the use of PACT to non-invasively assess the effects of real-time drug delivery in glioma tumors through transdermal administration with degradable indocyanine green-loaded hyaluronic acid MNs (ICG-HA-MNs). The outcome is systematically and quantitatively compared with that via intravenous injection. It is found that the photoacoustic signals of ICG in the tumor site express a faster elevation and shorter duration time in the intravenous injection group; by contrast, the photoacoustic signals demonstrate a lower intensity but prolonged duration time in the MNs group. The observed phenomenon indicates faster response but shorter drug duration for intravenous injection, which is in contrast with the lower loading but prolonged performance for transdermal drug delivery with MNs. These results exhibit good consistency with the earlier, common-sense findings reported from other aspects, confirming that PACT can serve as a potential imaging tool to precisely, non-invasively, and quickly evaluate in situ drug delivery effects and provide constructive guidance for the design and fabrication of microneedles. MDPI 2022-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9788625/ /pubmed/36559183 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics14122689 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Zhou, Yingying
Huang, Xiazi
Li, Jiyu
Zhu, Ting
Pang, Weiran
Chow, Larry
Nie, Liming
Sun, Lei
Lai, Puxiang
Small Animal In Situ Drug Delivery Effects via Transdermal Microneedles Array versus Intravenous Injection: A Pilot Observation Based on Photoacoustic Tomography
title Small Animal In Situ Drug Delivery Effects via Transdermal Microneedles Array versus Intravenous Injection: A Pilot Observation Based on Photoacoustic Tomography
title_full Small Animal In Situ Drug Delivery Effects via Transdermal Microneedles Array versus Intravenous Injection: A Pilot Observation Based on Photoacoustic Tomography
title_fullStr Small Animal In Situ Drug Delivery Effects via Transdermal Microneedles Array versus Intravenous Injection: A Pilot Observation Based on Photoacoustic Tomography
title_full_unstemmed Small Animal In Situ Drug Delivery Effects via Transdermal Microneedles Array versus Intravenous Injection: A Pilot Observation Based on Photoacoustic Tomography
title_short Small Animal In Situ Drug Delivery Effects via Transdermal Microneedles Array versus Intravenous Injection: A Pilot Observation Based on Photoacoustic Tomography
title_sort small animal in situ drug delivery effects via transdermal microneedles array versus intravenous injection: a pilot observation based on photoacoustic tomography
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9788625/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36559183
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics14122689
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