TY - JOUR
T1 - Localized, on-demand, sustained drug delivery from biopolymer-based materials
AU - Wu, Junqi
AU - Shaidani, Sawnaz
AU - Theodossiou, Sophia K.
AU - Hartzell, Emily J.
AU - Kaplan, David L.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Introduction: Local drug delivery facilitiates higher concentrations of drug molecules at or near the treatment site to enhance treatment efficiency and reduce drug toxicity and other systemic side effects. However, local drug delivery systems face challenges in terms of encapsulation, delivery, and controlled release of therapeutics. Areas covered: We provide an overview of naturally derived biopolymer-based drug delivery systems for localized, sustained, and on-demand treatment. We introduce the advantages and limitations of these systems for drug encapsulation, delivery, and local release, as well as recent applications. Expert opinion: Naturally derived biopolymers like cellulose, silk fibroin, chitosan, alginate, hyaluronic acid, and gelatin are good candidates for localized drug delivery because they are readily chemically modified, biocompatible, biodegradable (with the generation of metabolically compatible degradation products), and can be processed in aqueous and ambient environments to maintain the bioactivity of various therapeutics. The tradeoff between the effective treatment dosage and the response by local healthy tissue should be balanced during the design of these delivery systems. Future directions will be focused on strategies to design tunable and controlled biodegradation rates, as well as to explore commercial utility in substituting biopolymer-based systems for currently utilized synthetic polymers for implants for drug delivery.
AB - Introduction: Local drug delivery facilitiates higher concentrations of drug molecules at or near the treatment site to enhance treatment efficiency and reduce drug toxicity and other systemic side effects. However, local drug delivery systems face challenges in terms of encapsulation, delivery, and controlled release of therapeutics. Areas covered: We provide an overview of naturally derived biopolymer-based drug delivery systems for localized, sustained, and on-demand treatment. We introduce the advantages and limitations of these systems for drug encapsulation, delivery, and local release, as well as recent applications. Expert opinion: Naturally derived biopolymers like cellulose, silk fibroin, chitosan, alginate, hyaluronic acid, and gelatin are good candidates for localized drug delivery because they are readily chemically modified, biocompatible, biodegradable (with the generation of metabolically compatible degradation products), and can be processed in aqueous and ambient environments to maintain the bioactivity of various therapeutics. The tradeoff between the effective treatment dosage and the response by local healthy tissue should be balanced during the design of these delivery systems. Future directions will be focused on strategies to design tunable and controlled biodegradation rates, as well as to explore commercial utility in substituting biopolymer-based systems for currently utilized synthetic polymers for implants for drug delivery.
KW - Biopolymer
KW - biodegradation
KW - hydrogel
KW - localized drug delivery
KW - medical implant
KW - on-demand release
KW - sustained release
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85136961695&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/17425247.2022.2110582
DO - 10.1080/17425247.2022.2110582
M3 - Review article
C2 - 35930000
AN - SCOPUS:85136961695
SN - 1742-5247
VL - 19
SP - 1317
EP - 1335
JO - Expert Opinion on Drug Delivery
JF - Expert Opinion on Drug Delivery
IS - 10
ER -