4.5 Article

Biodegradable implantable fluconazole delivery rods designed for the treatment of fungal osteomyelitis: Influence of gamma sterilization

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS RESEARCH PART A
Volume 77A, Issue 3, Pages 632-638

Publisher

WILEY-LISS
DOI: 10.1002/jbm.a.30657

Keywords

fluconazole; biodegradable polymer rods; intrabone marrow delivery systems; osteomyelitis; sterilization

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Fluconazole poly(D,L-lactic) acid (PLA) and poly(L-lactic) acid (L-PLA) implantable delivery rods were studied, in vitro and in vivo, as an alternative treatment of fungal osteomyelitis. Implantable rods loaded with 5% fluconazole (FLU) were prepared by the injection-molding method and sterilized by gamma-irradiation at a dose of 25 kGy. Loading efficiency, physical chemistry (high performance liquid chromatography, X-ray diffraction, gel permeation chromatography), and in vitro and in vivo release assays were performed to evaluate the novel delivery systems and the sterilization effect on implant characteristics. In spite of polymer degradation after gamma-irradiation, the loading efficiency, chemical stability, and crystallographic structure of FLU were not affected. In vivo studies were carried out in femoral bone marrow of rabbits. Approximately 85 and 80% of the total dose were released within 12 and 4 weeks from PLA and L-PLA rods, respectively. This showed a faster release rate of FLU in vivo than in vitro, showing almost zero-order kinetics from PLA rods. (c) 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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