| Literature DB >> 33285323 |
Dan Yang1, Minglong Chen2, Ying Sun2, Yunpan Jin3, Chao Lu1, Xin Pan2, Guilan Quan4, Chuanbin Wu5.
Abstract
Transdermal drug delivery is an attractive route for dermatological disease therapy because it can directly target the lesion site on the skin, reduce adverse reactions associated with systemic administration, and improve patient compliance. However, the stratum corneum, as the main skin barrier, severely limits transdermal drug penetration, with compromised bioavailability. Microneedles (MNs), which are leveraged to markedly improve the penetration of therapeutic agents by piercing the stratum corneum and creating hundreds of reversible microchannels in a minimally invasive manner, have been envisioned as a milestone for effective transdermal drug delivery, especially for superficial disease therapy. Here, the emergence of versatile MNs for the transdermal delivery of various drugs is reviewed, particularly focusing on the application of MNs for the treatment of diverse skin diseases, including superficial tumors, scars, psoriasis, herpes, acne, and alopecia. Additionally, the promises and challenges of the widespread translation of MN-mediated transdermal drug delivery in the dermatology field are summarized.Entities:
Keywords: Microneedles; Skin diseases; Superficial tumor; Transdermal drug delivery
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33285323 DOI: 10.1016/j.actbio.2020.12.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Biomater ISSN: 1742-7061 Impact factor: 8.947