4.7 Article

Wireless implantable chip with integrated nitinol-based pump for radio-controlled local drug delivery

Journal

LAB ON A CHIP
Volume 15, Issue 4, Pages 1050-1058

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c4lc01290a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. Canada Foundation for Innovation
  3. British Columbia Knowledge Development Fund
  4. Canadian Microelectronics Corporation
  5. Canada Research Chairs program

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We demonstrate an active, implantable drug delivery device embedded with a microfluidic pump that is driven by a radio-controlled actuator for temporal drug delivery. The polyimide-packaged 10 x 10 x 2 mm(3) chip contains a micromachined pump chamber and check valves of Parylene C to force the release of the drug from a 76 mu L reservoir by wirelessly activating the actuator using external radio-frequency (RF) electromagnetic fields. The rectangular-shaped spiral-coil actuator based on nitinol, a biocompatible shape-memory alloy, is developed to perform cantilever-like actuation for pumping operation. The nitinol-coil actuator itself forms a passive 185 MHz resonant circuit that serves as a self-heat source activated via RF power transfer to enable frequency-selective actuation and pumping. Experimental wireless operation of fabricated prototypes shows successful release of test agents from the devices placed in liquid and excited by radiating tuned RF fields with an output power of 1.1 W. These tests reveal a single release volume of 219 nL, suggesting a device's capacity of similar to 350 individual ejections of drug from its reservoir. The thermal behavior of the activated device is also reported in detail. This proof-of-concept prototype validates the effectiveness of wireless RF pumping for fully controlled, long-lasting drug delivery, a key step towards enabling patient-tailored, targeted local drug delivery through highly miniaturized implants.

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