Drug delivery using electrochemically-triggered biodegradable electroactive materials
09783637 · 2017-10-10
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
C08L65/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
A61K41/0042
HUMAN NECESSITIES
C08G73/0273
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C08L67/04
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
A61K31/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
C08G69/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
A61K31/573
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K47/60
HUMAN NECESSITIES
C08G73/024
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
A61L27/54
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61K47/34
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K31/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
C08G69/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
A61K31/573
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K41/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A biodegradable electroactive material can be doped with a drug and the drug can be delivered to a living subject by stimulating the material with an electrical potential. The material (in this case a polymer) has an electrochemically responsive oligoaniline block terminated with a carboxylic acid moiety and is linked to an alcohol-terminated diol by an ester bond. Advantageously, the diol is PEG-400, PEG-2000, PCL-530, or PCL-2000.
Claims
1. A method of delivering a drug to a living patient, comprising: implanting a doped biodegradable electroactive polymer in the patient; and stimulating the doped polymer by application of an electrical potential to the polymer, wherein stimulating the doped polymer causes delivery of the drug to the patient, wherein the biodegradable electroactive polymer including a water soluble electrochemically responsive unit linked to another unit by a biodegradable bond, and the drug, wherein the biodegradable electroactive polymer is of the form: ##STR00002## wherein X is polyethylene glycol or polycaprolactone.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein each of the units has a molecular weight less than the renal filtration threshold.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein X is: poly(ethylene glycol)s having average molecular weight of 400 Da.; or poly(ethylene glycol)s having average molecular weight of 2000 Da.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein X is: poly(caprolactone)s having average molecular weight of 530 Da.; or poly(caprolactone)s having average molecular weight of 2000 Da.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the drug is dexamethasone phosphate.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention will be better understood with reference to the following illustrative and non-limiting drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(13) Preferred embodiments of the invention were produced by esterification of aniline pentamers terminated with carboxylic-acids. Production of the aniline pentamers will be discussed initially; synthesis of the preferred embodiments will be discussed afterward.
A. Production of Precursor Aniline Pentamers
(14) Referring first to
B. General Methodology for Synthesizing the Preferred Embodiments
(15) The preferred embodiments of the inventions described herein are all polymers, but it will be understood that this is only preferred and that materials in accordance with the invention need not be polymeric; diols need not necessarily be employed and other biodegradable bonds can be used to link to the water soluble electrochemically responsive units. The type of biodegradable bond employed will be determined by the type of blocks that are bonded together. Furthermore, it will be understood that although the preferred embodiments described herein use carboxylic acid-terminated oligoaniline blocks as the electrochemically responsive units, other water soluble electrochemically responsive units can be used instead. The herein-described preferred embodiments were produced by a synthesis adapted from a known method (L. Huang, J. Hu, L. Lang, X. Wang, P. Zhang, X. Jing, X. Wang, X. Chen, P. I. Lelkes, A. G. MacDiarmid, Y. Wei, Biomaterials 2007, 28, 1741). In short, alcohol-terminated poly(ethylene glycol)s or poly(caprolactone)s (3 mmol) were dissolved in N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP, 20 mL), to which was added AP (2.0 g, 3.0 mmol), dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCC, 1.9 g, 9.0 mmol) and 4-dimethylaminopyridine (DMAP, 0.2 g, 2.0 mmol). The reaction mixture was stirred at room temperature under an inert atmosphere of argon. After 72 hours the reaction mixture was filtered and added drop-wise to diethyl ether (1.5 L) that was stirred to assure the precipitation of a fine powder of the respective polymer. The stir bar was removed and the product was allowed to settle to the bottom of the container (typically 15-30 minutes). The diethyl ether was removed via pipette suction, and the polymer-rich layer at the bottom of the container was concentrated with a rotary evaporator to yield a thick oil. The oil was dissolved/dispersed in chloroform (10 mL), after which it was re-precipitated in diethyl ether, and this process of resuspension in chloroform followed by re-precipitation in diethyl ether was repeated two more times. The resulting polymers were dried under high vacuum for 24 hours. The polymers could be reduced to the leucoemeraldine state via brief exposure to aqueous hydrazine for ca. 15 minutes (after which no further gas was observed to evolve) followed by dialysis against ultrapure water in a cellulose dialysis tube with a molecular weight cutoff of ca. 3,500 Da, and dried under high vacuum for 48 hours.
C. Synthesis of the First Preferred Embodiment of the Invention
(16) The first preferred embodiment of the invention (
D. Synthesis of the Second Preferred Embodiment of the Invention
(17) The second preferred embodiment of the invention (
E. Synthesis of the Third Preferred Embodiment of the Invention
(18) The third preferred embodiment of the invention (
F. Synthesis of the Fourth Preferred Embodiment of the Invention
(19) The fourth preferred embodiment of the invention (
G. Doping of the Preferred Embodiments and Drug Delivery
(20) Advantageously, electroactive materials in accordance with the invention can be doped. One suitable dopant is camphorsulfonic acid (
(21) The ability of electroactive materials in accordance with the invention to deliver a drug to a living subject was demonstrated using dexamethasone phosphate (DMP), an anti-inflammatory having a molecular weight of 490 Da. Release of DMP into phosphate buffered saline (PBS) solution was monitored using UV spectroscopy. Films composed of each of the first, second, third, and fourth preferred embodiments and approximately 3 to 4 mg DMP were prepared on bioinert conductive and non-conductive substrates (glassy carbon electrodes and glass, respectively). DMP loadings were at a mole ratio of 1:1 dexamethasone phosphate: aniline pentamers (approximately 31 wt % for the first and third preferred embodiments and approximately 16 wt % for the second and fourth preferred embodiment). The experimental setups are depicted in
(22) Pulsatile release of DMP from films deposited on glassy carbon substrates was studied by chronoamperometry using 1 minute of electrical stimulation followed by 14 minutes of rest (
(23) Passive release of DMP from unstimulated films was low over the course of the experiment (1.5 hours), approximately 8% for the first preferred embodiment, approximately 3% for the second preferred embodiment, and approximately 2% for the third and fourth preferred embodiments (
(24) The electrochemically-triggered release of DMP from films deposited on glass substrates (
H. Biodegradability
(25) To demonstrate the susceptibility of the materials in accordance with the invention to hydrolytic degradation in vitro, films of each of the preferred embodiments were incubated in PBS in the absence or presence of cholesterol esterase (4 units/mL) which is an enzyme known to hydrolyze ester bonds in polyesters. The mass of each film was observed to decrease very slowly over a week, and the presence of the esterase moderately increased the rate at which this occurs. It was consequently concluded that the films would degrade slowly if administered in vivo (over the period of weeks to months). Analogous CSA-doped materials have been shown to support the adhesion of a variety of cells including C6 cells, keratinocytes, MC3T3-E1 cells, osteoblasts, PC12 cells and Schwann cells, human Mesenchymal stem cells, and human dermal fibroblasts. Films of the first and third preferred embodiments were found to be prone to fracture as a consequence of exposure to dynamic shear forces encountered during multiple media changes at 37° C. Films of the second and fourth preferred embodiments were much more robust and both human dermal fibroblasts and human mesenchymal stem cells were seen adhered to the films, suggesting their potential for in vivo implantation for a variety of applications (e.g., drug eluting coatings on completely biodegradable implants).
(26) Electrically triggered drug release from materials in accordance with the invention provides a novel platform for drug delivery. Synthesis and purification of polymers in accordance with the preferred embodiments is simple and scalable, requiring only 3 steps from commercially available starting materials. Polymers in accordance with the preferred embodiments are solution processable, thus facilitating the preparation of materials with a high drug loading of 16 or 31 wt %. Although DMP was used as a clinically applied model drug, this was only for purposes of illustration and other biologically-active molecules could be delivered instead, using the stimulation paradigms described here or others. Persons of ordinary skill in the art could modulate the release profiles of these molecules via simple modifications of the electrical input. Materials in accordance with the invention have potential to be used for the manufacture of completely biodegradable drug delivery systems.
(27) If non-polymeric electrochemically responsive units are used instead of polymers, those units will not necessarily display two alcohol functional groups. Rather, other units could be substituted for diols. As long as those other units are capable of being chemically bonded to the electrochemically responsive unit (if e.g. the other unit is an aldehyde, the electrochemically responsive unit will be terminated with an oxyamine and the bond will be an oxime bond) they need only be degradable to units that are water soluble and have molecular weights that are below the renal filtration limit.
(28) Although preferred embodiments have been described above, the scope of the invention is limited only by the following claims: