| Literature DB >> 19577597 |
Xianfeng Chen1, Tarl W Prow, Michael L Crichton, Derek W K Jenkins, Michael S Roberts, Ian H Frazer, Germain J P Fernando, Mark A F Kendall.
Abstract
Dry-coated microprojections (MPs) deliver vaccine to abundant immunogenic cells within the skin to induce immune responses. Success in this targeted vaccine delivery relies on overcoming the challenges of dry-coating the vaccine onto the very small (<or=90 microm length) and densely packed (approximately 20,000 cm(-2)) MPs. In this paper, we show that a gas-jet drying coating method achieves the desired uniform coating. The coating approach is robustly demonstrated on compounds representative of a range of immunotherapeutics (e.g. DNA, proteins), with each uniformly coated on thousands of MPs. Furthermore, the dry-coating remains intact during skin insertion, and then releases within the wet skin cellular environment within 3 min. Finally, we applied ovalbumin protein coated MP patches to immunise mice, achieving comparable antibody levels (p=0.08) with needle and syringe intramuscular injection. In summary, this paper presents a simple, practical and versatile method to achieve uniform coating on very small and densely packed MPs for a needle-free and targeted vaccine delivery technology.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19577597 DOI: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2009.06.029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Control Release ISSN: 0168-3659 Impact factor: 9.776