| Literature DB >> 21371510 |
Xianfeng Chen1, Germain J P Fernando, Michael L Crichton, Christopher Flaim, Sally R Yukiko, Emily J Fairmaid, Holly J Corbett, Clare A Primiero, Alexander B Ansaldo, Ian H Frazer, Lorena E Brown, Mark A F Kendall.
Abstract
Dry-coated microprojections can deliver vaccine to abundant antigen-presenting cells in the skin and induce efficient immune responses and the dry-coated vaccines are expected to be thermostable at elevated temperatures. In this paper, we show that we have dramatically improved our previously reported gas-jet drying coating method and greatly increased the delivery efficiency of coating from patch to skin to from 6.5% to 32.5%, by both varying the coating parameters and removing the patch edge. Combined with our previous dose sparing report of influenza vaccine delivery in a mouse model, the results show that we now achieve equivalent protective immune responses as intramuscular injection (with the needle and syringe), but with only 1/30th of the actual dose. We also show that influenza vaccine coated microprojection patches are stable for at least 6 months at 23°C, inducing comparable immunogenicity with freshly coated patches. The dry-coated microprojection patches thus have key and unique attributes in ultimately meeting the medical need in certain low-resource regions with low vaccine affordability and difficulty in maintaining "cold-chain" for vaccine storage and transport.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21371510 DOI: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2011.02.026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Control Release ISSN: 0168-3659 Impact factor: 9.776