Literature DB >> 23229857

Infection-responsive drug delivery from urinary biomaterials controlled by a novel kinetic and thermodynamic approach.

Nicola J Irwin1, Colin P McCoy, David S Jones, Sean P Gorman.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: The pH-dependent physicochemical properties of the antimicrobial quinolone, nalidixic acid, were exploited to achieve 'intelligent' drug release from a potential urinary catheter coating, poly(2-hydroxyethylmethacrylate) (p(HEMA)), in direct response to the elevated pH which occurs at the onset of catheter infection.
METHODS: p(HEMA) hydrogels, and reduced-hydrophilicity copolymers incorporating methyl methacrylate, were loaded with nalidixic acid by a novel, surface particulate localization method, and characterized in terms of pH-dependent drug release and microbiological activity against the common urease-producing urinary pathogen Proteus mirabilis.
RESULTS: The pH-dependent release kinetics of surface-localized nalidixic acid were 50- and 10-fold faster at pH 9, representing the alkaline conditions induced by urease-producing urinary pathogens, compared to release at pH 5 and pH 7 respectively. Furthermore, microbiological activity against P. mirabilis was significantly enhanced after loading surface particulate nalidixic acid in comparison to p(HEMA) hydrogels conventionally loaded with dispersed drug. The more hydrophobic methyl methacrylate-containing copolymers also demonstrated this pH-responsive behavior, but additionally exhibited a sustained period of zero-order release.
CONCLUSIONS: The paradigm presented here provides a system with latent, immediate infection-responsive drug release followed by prolonged zero-order antimicrobial delivery, and represents an 'intelligent', infection-responsive, self-sterilizing biomaterial.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23229857     DOI: 10.1007/s11095-012-0927-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pharm Res        ISSN: 0724-8741            Impact factor:   4.200


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