| Literature DB >> 33543398 |
Eric Lehner1,2, Matthias Menzel3, Daniel Gündel4, Stefan K Plontke2, Karsten Mäder1, Jessica Klehm3, Heike Kielstein5, Arne Liebau6.
Abstract
The effective delivery of drugs to the inner ear is still an unmet medical need. Local controlled drug delivery to this sensory organ is challenging due to its location in the petrous bone, small volume, tight barriers, and high vulnerability. Local intracochlear delivery of drugs would overcome the limitations of intratympanic (extracochlear) and systemic drug application. The requirements for such a delivery system include small size, appropriate flexibility, and biodegradability. We have developed biodegradable PLGA-based implants for controlled intracochlear drug release that can also be used in combination with cochlear implants (CIs), which are implantable neurosensory prosthesis for hearing rehabilitation. The drug carrier system was tested for implantation in the human inner ear in 11 human temporal bones. In five of the temporal bones, CI arrays from different manufacturers were implanted before insertion of the biodegradable PLGA implants. The drug carrier system and CI arrays were implanted into the scala tympani through the round window. Implanted temporal bones were evaluated by ultra-high-resolution computed tomography (µ-CT) to illustrate the position of implanted electrode carriers and the drug carrier system. The µ-CT measurements revealed the feasibility of implanting the PLGA implants into the scala tympani of the human inner ear and co-administration of the biodegradable PLGA implant with a CI array.Entities:
Keywords: Biodegradable polymer; Cochlear implant; Inner ear drug delivery; PLGA; Temporal bone; μCT
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33543398 PMCID: PMC8677643 DOI: 10.1007/s13346-021-00914-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Deliv Transl Res ISSN: 2190-393X Impact factor: 4.617
Implanted temporal bone characteristics
| Temporal bone | PLGA implant dimension | Cochlear implant array |
|---|---|---|
| #1 | 0.3 × 3 mm | None |
| #2 | 0.3 × 5 mm | None |
| #3 | 0.6 × 3 mm | None |
| #4 | 0.6 × 3 mm | None |
| #5 | 0.6 × 5 mm | None |
| #6 | 0.6 × 5 mm | None |
| #7 | 0.3 × 3 mm | Cochlear Contour Advance |
| #8 | 0.3 × 3 mm | Advanced Bionics HiFocus Mid-Scala |
| #9 | 0.3 × 3 mm | MED-EL FLEXSOFT |
| #10 | 0.3 × 3 mm | Cochlear Slim Modiolar |
| #11 | 0.6 × 5 mm | Cochlear Slim Modiolar |
Fig. 1Morphology of BaSO4-loaded PLGA implants. Approximate dimensions from top to bottom: 5 × 0.6 mm, 3 × 0.6 mm, 5 × 0.3 mm, and 3 × 0.3 mm
Fig. 2CT Image in hot/cold view of a 0.3 × 3 mm PLGA implant on day 0 and after incubation in PBS on days 3, 7, and 28
Fig. 3Histogram of the VOIs of the 0.3 × 3 mm PLGA implants in PBS over 28 days
Fig. 4Top view (left), side view (middle), and reconstructed 3D (right) µCT images of human temporal bones implanted with BaSO4-loaded PLGA implants. Red arrows indicate the positions of the PLGA implants, which are colored in orange in the 3D reconstruction pictures. Black and white scale bars indicate 1 mm
Fig. 5Side view (left) and top view (right) µCT images of human temporal bones implanted with BaSO4-loaded PLGA implants and various cochlear implant electrode arrays from different manufacturers. Red arrows indicate the positions of the PLGA implants. Blue arrows indicate the positions of the cochlear implant electrode arrays. Black scale bars indicate 1 mm
Fig. 63D reconstruction of the cochlea of temporal bone #7 implanted with a Cochlear Contour Advance electrode (brown) and a BaSO4-loaded PLGA implant (0.3 × 3 mm) (light blue)