4.7 Article

Drug Delivery Interfaces in the 21st Century: From Science Fiction Ideas to Viable Technologies

Journal

MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 10, Issue 10, Pages 3531-3543

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/mp4003283

Keywords

drug delivery; drug carriers; nanotechnology; controlled release implants; physiological barriers; pharmacokinetics; translational medicine

Funding

  1. NIH National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering [1F32EB015835-01]
  2. MIT-Harvard Cancer Center for Nanotechnology Excellence

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Early science fiction envisioned the future of drug delivery as targeted micrometer-scale submarines and cyborg body parts. Here we describe the progression of the field toward technologies that are now beginning to capture aspects of this early vision. Specifically, we focus on the two most prominent types of systems in drug delivery: the intravascular micro/nano drug carriers for delivery to the site of pathology and drug-loaded implantable devices that facilitate release with the predefined kinetics or in response to a specific cue. We discuss the unmet clinical needs that inspire these designs, the physiological factors that pose difficult challenges for their realization, and viable technologies that promise robust solutions. We also offer a perspective on where drug delivery may be in the next 50 years based on expected advances in material engineering and in the context of future diagnostics.

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