Colon-Targeted Oral Delivery of Hydroxyethyl Starch-Curcumin Microcapsules Loaded with Multiple Drugs Alleviates DSS-Induced Ulcerative Colitis in Mice.
Da HuangMinglang ZouChenlan XuYongming WangZhenjin XuWancong ZhangShijie TangZuquan WengPublished in: Macromolecular bioscience (2023)
Combination therapy through colon-targeted oral delivery of multiple drugs presents a promising approach for effectively treating ulcerative colitis (UC). However, the codelivery of drugs with diverse physicochemical properties in a single formulation remains a formidable challenge. Here, microcapsules are designed based on hydroxyethyl starch-curcumin (HES─CUR) conjugates to enable the simultaneous delivery of hydrophobic dexamethasone acetate (DA) and hydrophilic cefazolin sodium (CS), yielding multiple drug-loaded microcapsules (CS/DA-loaded HES─CUR microcapsules, CDHC-MCs) tailored for colon-targeted therapy of UC. Thorough characterization confirms the successful synthesis and exceptional biocompatibility of CDHC-MCs. Biodistribution studies demonstrate that the microcapsules exhibit an impressive inflammatory targeting effect, accumulating preferentially in inflamed colons. In vivo experiments employing a dextran-sulfate-sodium-induced UC mouse model reveal that CDHC-MCs not only arrest UC progression but also facilitate the restoration of colon length and alleviate inflammation-related splenomegaly. These findings highlight the potential of colon-targeted delivery of multiple drugs within a single formulation as a promising strategy to enhance UC treatment, and the CDHC-MCs developed in this study hold great potential in developing novel oral formulations for advanced UC therapy.
Keyphrases
- cancer therapy
- drug delivery
- combination therapy
- ulcerative colitis
- drug induced
- mouse model
- high glucose
- oxidative stress
- wound healing
- emergency department
- type diabetes
- human health
- mass spectrometry
- risk assessment
- mesenchymal stem cells
- computed tomography
- metabolic syndrome
- genome wide
- liquid chromatography
- gene expression
- smoking cessation
- dna methylation
- lactic acid
- climate change
- cell cycle
- pet ct