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Polymeric perfluorocarbon nanoemulsions are ultrasound-activated wireless drug infusion catheters

Authors :
Raag D. Airan
Mo Baikoghli
R.H. Cheng
Jeffrey B. Wang
Tali Ilovitsh
A. Karthik
Byung C. Yoon
Katherine W. Ferrara
Muna Aryal
Qian Zhong
Niloufar Hosseini-Nassab
Source :
Biomaterials
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Catheter-based intra-arterial drug therapies have proven effective for a range of oncologic, neurologic, and cardiovascular applications. However, these procedures are limited by their invasiveness and relatively broad drug spatial distribution. The ideal technique for local pharmacotherapy would be noninvasive and would flexibly deliver a given drug to any region of the body with high spatial and temporal precision. Combining polymeric perfluorocarbon nanoemulsions with existent clinical focused ultrasound systems could in principle meet these needs, but it has not been clear whether these nanoparticles could provide the necessary drug loading, stability, and generalizability across a range of drugs, beyond a few niche applications. Here, we develop polymeric perfluorocarbon nanoemulsions into a generalized platform for ultrasound-targeted delivery of hydrophobic drugs with high potential for clinical translation. We demonstrate that a wide variety of drugs may be effectively uncaged with ultrasound using these nanoparticles, with drug loading increasing with hydrophobicity. We also set the stage for clinical translation by delineating production protocols that are scalable and yield sterile, stable, and optimized ultrasound-activated drug-loaded nanoemulsions. Finally, we exhibit a new potential application of these nanoemulsions for local control of vascular tone. This work establishes the power of polymeric perfluorocarbon nanoemulsions as a clinically-translatable platform for efficacious, noninvasive, and localized ultrasonic drug uncaging for myriad targets in the brain and body.

Details

ISSN :
18785905
Volume :
206
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biomaterials
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ce6d329e953f80748fdf54b978c75cc6