Rapidly Biodegrading PLGA-Polyurethane Fibers for Sustained Release of Physicochemically Diverse Drugs

Citation

Blakney, A. K.; Simonovsky, F. I.; Suydam, I. T.; Ratner, B. D.; & Woodrow, K. A. (2016). Rapidly Biodegrading PLGA-Polyurethane Fibers for Sustained Release of Physicochemically Diverse Drugs. Acs Biomaterials Science & Engineering, 2(9), 1595-1607.

Abstract

Sustained release of physicochemically diverse drugs from electrospun fibers remains a challenge and precludes the use of fibers in many medical applications. Here, we synthesize a new class of polyurethanes with poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) moieties that degrade faster than polyurethanes based on polycaprolactone. The new polymers, with varying hard to soft segment ratios and fluorobenzene pendant group content, were electrospun into nanofibers and loaded with four physicochemically diverse small molecule drugs. Polymers were characterized using GPC, XPS, and F-19 NMR. The size and morphology of electrospun fibers were visualized using SEM, and drug/polymer compatibility and drug crystallinity were evaluated using DSC. We measured in vitro drug release, polymer degradation and cell-culture cytotoxicity of biodegradation products. We show that these newly synthesized PLGA-based polyurethanes degrade up to 65-80% within 4 weeks and are cytocompatible in vitro. The drug-loaded electrospun fibers were amorphous solid dispersions. We found that increasing the hard to soft segment ratio of the polymer enhances the sustained release of positively charged drugs, whereas increasing the fluorobenzene pendant content caused more rapid release of some drugs. In summary, increasing the hard segment or fluorobenzene pendant content of segmented polyurethanes containing PLGA moieties allows for modulation of physicochemically diverse drug release from electrospun fibers while maintaining a biologically relevant biodegradation rate.

Keyword(s)

biodegradation
Biomedical applications
block-copolymers
chain extenders
degradation
delivery
drug delivery
electrospun fibers
hard segment
human plasma
mechanical-properties
plga
Polyurethanes
scaffolds
surface-properties

Notes

Dv8xm
Times Cited:1
Cited References Count:57

Reference Type

Journal Article

Secondary Title

Acs Biomaterials Science & Engineering

Author(s)

Blakney, A. K.
Simonovsky, F. I.
Suydam, I. T.
Ratner, B. D.
Woodrow, K. A.

Year Published

2016

Date Published

1472688000

Volume Number

2

Issue Number

9

Pages

1595-1607

ISSN/ISBN

2373-9878

DOI

10.1021/acsbiomaterials.6b00346