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Manufacturing and Examination of Vaginal Drug Delivery System by FDM 3D Printing

Authors :
Petra Arany
Ildikó Papp
Marianna Zichar
Géza Regdon
Mónika Béres
Melinda Szalóki
Renátó Kovács
Pálma Fehér
Zoltán Ujhelyi
Miklós Vecsernyés
Ildikó Bácskay
Source :
Pharmaceutics, Vol 13, Iss 10, p 1714 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2021.

Abstract

Vaginal drug delivery systems can provide a long-term and constant liberation of the active pharmaceutical ingredient even for months. For our experiment, FDM 3D printing was used to manufacture the vaginal ring samples from thermoplastic polyurethane filament, which enables fast manufacturing of complex, personalized medications. 3D printing can be an excellent alternative instead of industrial manufacturing, which is complicated and time-consuming. In our work, the 3D printed vaginal rings were filled manually with jellified metronidazole or chloramphenicol for the treatment of bacterial vaginosis. The need for manual filling was certified by the thermogravimetric and heatflow assay results. The manufactured samples were analyzed by an Erweka USP type II Dissolution Apparatus, and the dissolution profile can be distinguished based on the applied jellifying agents and the API’s. All samples were considered non-similar based on the pairwise comparison. The biocompatibility properties were determined by prolonged MTT assay on HeLa cells, and the polymer could be considered non-toxic. Based on the microbiological assay on E. coli metronidazole and chitosan containing samples had bactericidal effects while just metronidazole or just chitosan containing samples bacteriostatic effect. None of these samples showed a fungistatic or fungicide effect against C. albicans. Based on our results, we successfully manufactured 3D printed vaginal rings filled with jellified metronidazole.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13101714 and 19994923
Volume :
13
Issue :
10
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Pharmaceutics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.32fe330b71a4bdc99908c1eb2e8a633
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics13101714