4.8 Article

Tuning Model Drug Release and Soft-Tissue Bioadhesion of Polyester Films by Plasma Post-Treatment

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 6, Issue 8, Pages 5749-5758

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/am500454b

Keywords

bioadhesion; radicals; plasma; soft tissue; PLGA; drug release

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education [RG 46/11, MOE2012-T2-2-046]

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Plasma treatments are investigated as a post-production method of tuning drug release and bioadhesion of poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) thin films. PLGA films were treated under varying conditions by controlling gas flow rate, composition, treatment time, and radio frequency (RF) power. In vitro release of the drug-like molecule fluorescein diacetate (FDAc) from plasma-treated PLGA was tunable by controlling RF power; an increase of 65% cumulative release is reported compared to controls. Bioadhesion was sensitive to RF power and treatment time, assessed using ex vivo shear stress tests with wetted swine aorta. We report a maximum bioadhesion similar to 6-fold that of controls and 5-fold that of DOPA-based mussel adhesives tested to swine skin.(1) The novelty of this post-treatment is the activation of a hydrophobic polyester film for bioadhesion, which can be quenched, while simultaneously tuning drug-release kinetics. This exemplifies the promise of plasma post-treatment for in-clinic bioadhesive activation, along with technological advancements, i.e., atmospheric plasma and hand-held plasma pencils.

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