4.7 Article

Patterned Drug-Eluting Coatings for Tracheal Stents Based on PLA, PLGA, and PCL for the Granulation Formation Reduction: In Vivo Studies

Journal

PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13091437

Keywords

tracheal stents; drug-eluting coatings; microchamber array; PLA; PCL; PLGA; methylprednisolone sodium succinate; in vivo study; Soviet chinchilla rabbits

Funding

  1. European Union within the OYSTER project [760827]
  2. Russian Federation [MK-4273.2021.1.4, 14.Z50.31.0044]
  3. RUDN University Program 5-100

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The study demonstrates that films based on PLA, PCL, and PLGA can be used as drug-eluting coatings for effective suppression of granulation tissue. Different polymers exhibit varying stability and retention capabilities when composing coatings, contributing significantly to tissue suppression in practical applications.
Expandable metallic stent placement is often the only way to treat airway obstructions. Such treatment with an uncoated stent causes granulation proliferation and subsequent restenosis, resulting in the procedure's adverse complications. Systemic administration of steroids drugs in high dosages slows down granulation tissue overgrowth but leads to long-term side effects. Drug-eluting coatings have been used widely in cardiology for many years to suppress local granulation and reduce the organism's systemic load. Still, so far, there are no available analogs for the trachea. Here, we demonstrate that PLA-, PCL- and PLGA-based films with arrays of microchambers to accommodate therapeutic substances can be used as a drug-eluting coating through securely fixing on the surface of an expandable nitinol stent. PCL and PLA were most resistant to mechanical damage associated with packing in delivery devices and making it possible to keep high-molecular-weight cargo. Low-molecular-weight methylprednisolone sodium succinate is poorly retained in PCL- and PLGA-based microchambers after immersion in deionized water (only 9.5% and 15.7% are left, respectively). In comparison, PLA-based microchambers retain 96.3% after the same procedure. In vivo studies on rabbits have shown that effective granulation tissue suppression is achieved when PLA and PLGA are used for coatings. PLGA-based microchamber coating almost completely degrades in 10 days in the trachea, while PLA-based microchamber films partially preserve their structure. The PCL-based film coating is most stable over time, which probably causes blocking the outflow of fluid from the tracheal mucosa and the aggravation of the inflammatory process against the background of low drug concentration. Combination and variability of polymers in the fabrication of films with microchambers to retain therapeutic compounds are suggested as a novel type of drug-eluting coating.

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