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Mucoadhesive chitosan-methylcellulose oral patches for the treatment of local mouth bacterial infections.

Lorenzo BonettiAlice CaprioglioNina BonoGabriele CandianiLina Altomare
Published in: Biomaterials science (2023)
Mucoadhesive buccal patches are dosage forms promising for successful drug delivery. They show the distinctive advantages of long residence time on the oral mucosa and increased in situ drug bioavailability. In this context, electrophoretic deposition (EPD) of chitosan (CS) has been demonstrated as a simple and easily tunable technique to produce mucoadhesive buccal patches. However, CS-based buccal patches may suffer from weak mucoadhesion, which can impair their therapeutic effect. In this work, methylcellulose (MC), a widely investigated biopolymer in the biomedical area, was exploited to increase the mucoadhesive characteristic of pristine CS patches. CS-MC patches were obtained in a one-pot process via EPD, and the possibility of incorporating gentamicin sulfate (GS) as a model of a broad-spectrum antibiotic in the so-obtained patches was investigated. The resulting CS-MC patches showed high stability in a water environment and superior mucoadhesive characteristic ( σ adh = 0.85 ± 0.26 kPa, W adh = 1192.28 ± 602.36 Pa mm) when compared with the CS control samples ( σ adh = 0.42 ± 0.22 kPa, W adh = 343.13 ± 268.89 Pa mm), due to both the control of the patch porosity and the bioadhesive nature of MC. Furthermore, GS-loaded patches showed no in vitro cytotoxic effects by challenging L929 cells with material extracts and noteworthy antibacterial activity on both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacterial strains.
Keyphrases
  • drug delivery
  • gram negative
  • multidrug resistant
  • escherichia coli
  • cancer therapy
  • wound healing
  • cell proliferation
  • adverse drug
  • drug release
  • atomic force microscopy
  • energy transfer