4.7 Review

A Comprehensive Review of Microneedles: Types, Materials, Processes, Characterizations and Applications

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 13, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym13162815

Keywords

3D printing; characterization; drug delivery; advanced manufacturing; microneedle; polymers; therapeutics; transdermal

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Grant (NSF CMMI Awards) Center of Excellence in Product Design and Advanced Manufacturing at North Carolina A&T State University [1663128, 2100739]
  2. Div Of Civil, Mechanical, & Manufact Inn
  3. Directorate For Engineering [2100739] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Drug delivery through the skin offers advantages such as avoiding hepatic metabolism and maintaining steady plasma concentration, but only a limited number of drugs with ideal properties can achieve therapeutic concentrations. Microneedles are a promising physical enhancement method to expand the spectrum of drugs for transdermal delivery. Different materials used for microneedles have implications for transdermal drug delivery, but challenges in sustained delivery, efficacy, cost-effective fabrication, and large-scale manufacturing remain. Microneedles have potential impact on drug delivery, vaccine delivery, disease diagnostics, and cosmetics applications.
Drug delivery through the skin offers many advantages such as avoidance of hepatic first-pass metabolism, maintenance of steady plasma concentration, safety, and compliance over oral or parenteral pathways. However, the biggest challenge for transdermal delivery is that only a limited number of potent drugs with ideal physicochemical properties can passively diffuse and intercellularly permeate through skin barriers and achieve therapeutic concentration by this route. Significant efforts have been made toward the development of approaches to enhance transdermal permeation of the drugs. Among them, microneedles represent one of the microscale physical enhancement methods that greatly expand the spectrum of drugs for transdermal and intradermal delivery. Microneedles typically measure 0.1-1 mm in length. In this review, microneedle materials, fabrication routes, characterization techniques, and applications for transdermal delivery are discussed. A variety of materials such as silicon, stainless steel, and polymers have been used to fabricate solid, coated, hollow, or dissolvable microneedles. Their implications for transdermal drug delivery have been discussed extensively. However, there remain challenges with sustained delivery, efficacy, cost-effective fabrication, and large-scale manufacturing. This review discusses different modes of characterization and the gaps in manufacturing technologies associated with microneedles. This review also discusses their potential impact on drug delivery, vaccine delivery, disease diagnostic, and cosmetics applications.

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