4.6 Article

MOF-Thermogel Composites for Differentiated and Sustained Dual Drug Delivery

Journal

ACS BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
Volume 9, Issue 10, Pages 5724-5736

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.3c01103

Keywords

temperature-responsive; hydrogel; biomaterial; porous; drug release

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In recent years, there has been increasing interest in multidrug therapy due to its potential for synergistic drug action and sequential drug delivery. However, the combination of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) with temperature-responsive hydrogels (or thermogels) in composite materials for simultaneous multidrug delivery has received limited attention. In this study, we conducted a systematic investigation of different MOFs embedded within PEG-containing thermogel matrices, and identified that UiO-66 can achieve temporally differentiated yet sustained simultaneous drug release.
In recent years, multidrug therapy has gained increasing popularity due to the possibility of achieving synergistic drug action and sequential delivery of different medical payloads for enhanced treatment efficacy. While a number of composite material release platforms have been developed, few combine the bottom-up design versatility of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) to tailor drug release behavior, with the convenience of temperature-responsive hydrogels (or thermogels) in their unique ease of administration and formulation. Yet, despite their potential, MOF-thermogel composites have been largely overlooked for simultaneous multidrug delivery. Herein, we report the first systematic study of common MOFs (UiO-66, MIL-53(Al), MIL-100(Fe), and MOF-808) with different pore sizes, geometries, and hydrophobicities for their ability to achieve simultaneous dual drug release when embedded within PEG-containing thermogel matrices. After establishing that MOFs exert small influences on the rheological properties of the thermogels despite the penetration of polymers into the MOF pores in solution, the release profiles of ibuprofen and caffeine as model hydrophobic and hydrophilic drugs, respectively, from MOF-thermogel composites were investigated. Through these studies, we elucidated the important role of hydrophobic matching between MOF pores and loaded drugs in order for the MOF component to distinctly influence drug release kinetics. These findings enabled us to identify a viable MOF-thermogel composite containing UiO-66 that showed vastly different release kinetics between ibuprofen and caffeine, enabling temporally differentiated yet sustained simultaneous drug release to be achieved. Finally, the MOF-thermogel composites were shown to be noncytotoxic in vitro, paving the way for these underexploited composite materials to find possible clinical applications for multidrug therapy.

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