posted on 2023-10-08, 13:04authored byYanyan Li, Kerong Chen, Yushuang Pang, Jiaxue Zhang, Ming Wu, Yurui Xu, Shitai Cao, Xinxin Zhang, Shaolei Wang, Yuping Sun, Xinghai Ning, Xiaoliang Wang, Desheng Kong
Additive
manufacturing, commonly known as 3D printing, allows decentralized
drug fabrication of orally administered tablets. Microneedles are
comparatively favorable for self-administered transdermal drug delivery
with improved absorption and bioavailability. Due to the cross-scale
geometric characteristics, 3D-printed microneedles face a significant
trade-off between the feature resolution and production speed in conventional
layer-wise deposition sequences. In this study, we introduce an economical
and scalable direct ink drawing strategy to create drug-loaded microneedles.
A freestanding microneedle is efficiently generated upon each pneumatic
extrusion and controlled drawing process. Sharp tips of ∼5
μm are formed with submillimeter nozzles, representing 2 orders
of magnitude improved resolution. As the key enabler of this fabrication
strategy, the yield-stress fluid inks are formulated by simply filling
silica nanoparticles into regular polymer solutions. The approach
is compatible with various microneedles based on dissolvable, biodegradable,
and nondegradable polymers. Various matrices are readily adopted to
adjust the release behaviors of the drug-loaded microneedles. Successful
fabrication of multifunctional patches with heterogeneously integrated
microneedles allows the treatment of melanoma via synergistic photothermal
therapy and combination chemotherapy. The personalized patches are
designed for cancer severity to achieve high therapeutic efficacy
with minimal side effects. The direct ink drawing reported here provides
a facile and low-cost fabrication strategy for multifunctional microneedle
patches for self-administering transdermal drug delivery.