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Flexible 3D Nanonetworked Silica Film as a Polymer-Free Drug-Eluting Stent Platform to Effectively Suppress Tissue Hyperplasia in Rat Esophagus.

Eunyoung JeonJeon Min KangGa-Hyun BaeChu Hui ZengSeungyong ShinByeongdu LeeWooram ParkJung Hoon ParkJoonseok Lee
Published in: Advanced healthcare materials (2022)
Loading and eluting drugs on self-expandable metallic stents (SEMSs) can be challenging in terms of fabrication, mechanical stability, and therapeutic effects. In this study, a flexible 3D nanonetworked silica film (NSF) capable of withstanding mechanical stress during dynamic expansion is constructed to function as a drug delivery platform on an entire SEMS surface. Despite covering a broad curved area, the synthesized NSF is defect-free and thin enough to increase the stent strut diameter (110 µm) by only 0.4 percent (110.45 µm). The hydrophobic modification of the surface enables loading of 4.7 times the sirolimus (SRL) concentration in NSF than Cypher, polymer-coated commercial stent, which is based on the same thickness of coating layer. Furthermore, SRL-loaded NSF exhibits a twofold delay in release compared to the control group without NSF. The SRL-loaded NSF SEMS significantly suppresses stent-induced tissue hyperplasia than the control SEMS in the rat esophagus (all variables, p < 0.05). Thus, the developed NSF is a promising polymer-free drug delivery platform to efficiently treat esophageal stricture.
Keyphrases
  • drug delivery
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  • high throughput
  • oxidative stress
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  • wastewater treatment
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  • diabetic rats
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  • heat stress