Disease-Triggered Drug Release Effectively Prevents Acute Inflammatory Flare-Ups, Achieving Reduced Dosing.
Alexandra StubeliusWangzhong ShengSangeun LeeJason OlejniczakMonica GumaAdah AlmutairiPublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2018)
For conditions with inflammatory flare-ups, fast drug-release from a depot is crucial to reduce cell infiltration and prevent long-term tissue destruction. While this concept has been explored for chronic diseases, preventing acute inflammatory flares has not been explored. To address this issue, a preventative inflammation-sensitive system is developed and applied to acute gout, a condition where millions of inflammatory cells are recruited rapidly, causing excruciating and debilitating pain. Rapid drug release is first demonstrated from a pH-responsive acetalated dextran particle loaded with dexamethasone (AcDex-DXM), reducing proinflammatory cytokines in vitro as efficiently as free drug. Then, using the air pouch model of gout, mice are pretreated 24 h before inducing inflammation. AcDex-DXM reduces overall cell infiltration with decreased neutrophils, increases monocytes, and diminishes cytokines and chemokines. In a more extended prophylaxis model, murine joints are pretreated eight days before initiating inflammation. After quantifying cell infiltration, only AcDex-DXM reduces the overall joint inflammation, where neither free drug nor a conventional drug-depot achieves adequate anti-inflammatory effects. Here, the superior efficacy of disease-triggered drug-delivery to prevent acute inflammation is demonstrated over free drug and slow-release depots. This approach and results promise exciting treatment opportunities for multiple inflammatory conditions suffering from acute flares.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- drug delivery
- drug release
- liver failure
- drug induced
- respiratory failure
- aortic dissection
- induced apoptosis
- single cell
- cell therapy
- hepatitis b virus
- adipose tissue
- adverse drug
- cancer therapy
- low dose
- neuropathic pain
- bone marrow
- stem cells
- metabolic syndrome
- immune response
- spinal cord
- big data
- dendritic cells
- smoking cessation
- spinal cord injury
- mesenchymal stem cells
- skeletal muscle
- wound healing
- insulin resistance
- postoperative pain