posted on 2020-07-10, 14:05authored byMengjiao Liu, Anshuman Dasgupta, Patrick Koczera, Sandra Schipper, Dirk Rommel, Yang Shi, Fabian Kiessling, Twan Lammers
Microbubbles
(MB) are routinely used ultrasound (US) contrast agents
that have recently attracted increasing attention as stimuli-responsive
drug delivery systems. To better understand MB-based drug delivery,
we studied the role of drug hydrophobicity and molecular weight on
MB loading, shelf-life stability, US properties, and drug release.
Eight model drugs, varying in hydrophobicity and molecular weight,
were loaded into the shell of poly(butyl cyanoacrylate) (PBCA) MB.
In the case of drugs with progesterone as a common structural backbone
(i.e., for corticosteroids), loading capacity and drug release correlated
well with hydrophobicity and molecular weight. Conversely, when employing
drugs with no structural similarity (i.e., four different fluorescent
dyes), loading capacity and release did not correlate with hydrophobicity
and molecular weight. All model drug-loaded MB formulations could
be equally efficiently destroyed upon exposure to US. Together, these
findings provide valuable insights on how the physicochemical properties
of (model) drug molecules affect their loading and retention in and
US-induced release from polymeric MB, thereby facilitating the development
of drug-loaded MB formulations for US-triggered drug delivery.