4.7 Article

Inkjet printing of small molecules, biologics, and nanoparticles

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 600, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2021.120462

Keywords

Inkjet printing; Small molecules; Biological drugs; Nanoparticles

Funding

  1. FONDECYT by Chilean National Agency for Research and Development (ANID) [1181689, ANID/PIA/ACT192144, ANID/PCI REDI170653]
  2. FONDAP by Chilean National Agency for Research and Development (ANID) [15130011]
  3. Chilean National Agency for Research and Development (ANID) [21170322]
  4. Chilean National Agency

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Inkjet printing has emerged as a novel technology in the pharmaceutical industry for manufacturing personalized dosage forms and delivering drugs, including hydrophilic or poorly water-soluble small molecules, biological drugs, and nanoscale drug-loaded particles. However, challenges such as selecting the proper ink constituents and printer, ensuring dose accuracy, and stability studies of drugs within ink still need to be addressed for successful implementation in the field.
During the last decades, inkjet printing has emerged as a novel technology and attracted the attention of the pharmaceutical industry, as a potential method for manufacturing personalized and customizable dosage forms to deliver drugs. Commonly, the desired drug is dissolved or dispersed within the ink and then dispensed in various dosage forms. Using this approach, several studies have been conducted to load hydrophilic or poorly water-soluble small molecules onto the surface of different solid substrates, including films, tablets, microneedles, and smart data-enriched edible pharmaceuticals, using two-dimensional and three-dimensional inkjet printing methods, with high dose accuracy and reproducibility. Furthermore, biological drugs, such as peptides, proteins, growth factors, and plasmids, have also been evaluated with positive results, eliciting the expected biological response; nonetheless, minor changes in the structure of these compounds with significant impaired activity cannot be dismissed. Another strategy using inkjet printing is to disperse drug-loaded nanoscale particles in the ink liquid, such as nanosuspension, nanocomplexes, or nanoparticles, which have been explored with promising results. Although these favorable outcomes, the proper selection of ink constituents and the inkjet printer, the correlation of printing cycles and effectively printed doses, the stability studies of drugs within the ink and the optimal analysis of samples before and after the printing process are the main challenges for inkjet printing, and therefore, this review analyzes these aspects to assess the body of current literature and help to guide future investigations on this field.

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