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Transformative Materials for Interfacial Drug Delivery.

Prachi DesaiAnshuman DasguptaAlexandros Marios SofiasQuim PeñaRobert GöstlIoana SlabuUlrich SchwanebergThomas StiehlWolfgang WagnerStefan JockenhoevelJulia Carolin StinglRafael KramannChristian TrautweinTim H BrümmendorfFabian KießlingAndreas HerrmannTwan Lammers
Published in: Advanced healthcare materials (2023)
Drug delivery systems (DDS) are designed to temporally and spatially control drug availability and activity. They assist in improving the balance between on-target therapeutic efficacy and off-target toxic side effects. DDS aid in overcoming biological barriers encountered by drug molecules upon applying them via various routes of administration. They are furthermore increasingly explored for modulating the interface between implanted (bio)medical materials and host tissue. Here, an overview of the biological barriers and host-material interfaces encountered by DDS upon oral, intravenous, and local administration is provided, and material engineering advances at different time and space scales to exemplify how current and future DDS can contribute to improved disease treatment are highlighted.
Keyphrases
  • drug delivery
  • healthcare
  • high dose
  • cancer therapy
  • current status
  • signaling pathway
  • adverse drug
  • drug induced
  • electron transfer
  • combination therapy