4.8 Article

Light activated pulsatile drug delivery for prolonged peripheral nerve block

Journal

BIOMATERIALS
Volume 283, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2022.121453

Keywords

Drug delivery; POEGMA nanogel; Bupivacaine; Regional anesthesia; Thermoresponsive; Near-infrared (NIR) radiation

Funding

  1. ERC Consolidator Grant program [ERC-2013-CoG-614715]
  2. VI National R&D&i Plan 2008-2011 - Instituto de Salud Carlos III
  3. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities [BES-2015-073735, PRE2018-085769]
  4. Instituto de Salud Carlos III [MS19/00092]

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A thermoresponsive nanogel-based release system has been developed for prolonged anesthesia. This system can be activated by near-infrared light and achieve controlled drug release. In vivo experiments demonstrate significantly prolonged neurobehavioral anesthetic effect without toxicity.
Regional anesthesia is widely used in peripheral nerve block and in neuraxial anesthesia to reduce anesthetics systemic side effects and shorten recovery times. However, when applied as a single injection (e.g., peripheral nerve block) it is limited by the duration of its effect. Herein, we develop a thermoresponsive nanogel based on poly(oligoethylene glycol methacrylate) containing the long-lasting anesthetic bupivacaine, which can be externally activated by using near-infrared light due to the photothermal properties of hollow gold nanoparticles embedded in the nanogel which facilitate its phase transition, triggering drug release at a controlled temperature above body temperature. Bupivacaine in vitro release can be repeatedly triggered to achieve a controlled pulsatile release of the drug due to the reversible nature of the thermosensitive nanogel, achieving a spatio-temporal control of the release. In vivo sciatic nerve block demonstrates that whereas the administered dose of free bupivacaine produces sensory block and impaired motor function for 2 h, the equivalent bupivacaine dose included in the developed release system can significantly prolong its neurobehavioral anesthetic effect for over 6 h. This release system can also be reactivated multiple times by subsequent irradiation cycles without observing detrimental toxicity in the infiltrated tissues.

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