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Adventitial injection of HA/SA hydrogel loaded with PLGA rapamycin nanoparticle inhibits neointimal hyperplasia in a rat aortic wire injury model.

Authors :
Bai H
Wu H
Zhang L
Sun P
Liu Y
Xie B
Zhang C
Wei S
Wang W
Li J
Source :
Drug delivery and translational research [Drug Deliv Transl Res] 2022 Dec; Vol. 12 (12), pp. 2950-2959. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Apr 04.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Neointimal hyperplasia is a persistent complication after vascular interventions, and it is also the leading cause of vascular graft restenosis and failure after arterial interventions, so novel treatment methods are needed to treat this complication. We hypothesized that adventitial injection of HA/SA hydrogel loaded with PLGA rapamycin nanoparticle (hydrogel-PLGA-rapamycin) could inhibit neointimal hyperplasia in a rat aortic wire injury model. The HA/SA hydrogel was fabricated by the interaction of hyaluronic acid (HA), sodium alginate (SA), and CaCO <subscript>3</subscript> ; and loaded with PLGA rapamycin nanoparticle or rhodamine uniformly. A SD rat aortic wire injury induced neointimal hyperplasia model was developed, the control group only received wire injury, the adventitial application group received 10 μL hydrogel-PLGA-rapamycin after wire injury, and the adventitial injection group received 10 μL hydrogel-PLGA-rapamycin injected into the aortic adventitia after wire injury. Tissues were harvested at day 21 and analyzed by histology and immunohistochemical staining. Hydrogel loaded with rhodamine can be successfully injected into the aortic adventitia and was encapsuled by the adventitia. The hydrogel could be seen beneath the adventitia after adventitial injection but was almost degraded at day 21. There was a significantly thinner neointima in the adventitial application group and adventitial injection group compared to the control group (p = 0.0009). There were also significantly fewer CD68 <superscript>+</superscript> (macrophages) cells (p = 0.0012), CD3 <superscript>+</superscript> (lymphocytes) cells (p = 0.0011), p-mTOR <superscript>+</superscript> cells (p = 0.0019), PCNA <superscript>+</superscript> cells (p = 0.0028) in the adventitial application and adventitial injection groups compared to the control group. The endothelial cells expressed arterial identity markers (Ephrin-B2 and dll-4) in all these three groups. Adventitial injection of hydrogel-PLGA-rapamycin can effectively inhibit neointimal hyperplasia after rat aortic wire injury. This may be a promising drug delivery method and therapeutic choice to inhibit neointimal hyperplasia after vascular interventions.<br /> (© 2022. Controlled Release Society.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2190-3948
Volume :
12
Issue :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Drug delivery and translational research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35378720
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13346-022-01158-x