It is estimated that 90% of all medicines are oral formulations and their market share is still increasing, due to sound advantages for the patient, the pharmaceutical industry and healthcare systems. Considering biopharmaceutical issues such as physicochemical requirements of the drug and physiological conditions, however, oral delivery is one of the most challenging routes. Recognising solubility, permeability and residence time in the gastrointestinal milieu as key parameters, different characteristics of drugs and their delivery systems such as size, pH, density, diffusion, swelling, adhesion, degradation and permeability can be adjusted to improve oral delivery. Future developments will focus on further improvement in patient compliance as well as the feasibility of administering biotech drugs via the oral route.
The interaction of targeted drug carriers with epithelial and endothelial barriers in vivo is largely determined by the dynamics of the body fluids. To simulate these conditions in binding assays, a fully biocompatible in vitro model was developed which can accurately mimic a wide range of physiological flow conditions on a thumbnail-format cell-chip. This acoustically-driven microfluidic system was used to study the interaction characteristics of protein-coated particles with cells. Poly(D,L-lactide-co-glycolide) (PLGA) microparticles (2.9 +/- 1 microm) were conjugated with wheat germ agglutinin (WGA-MP, cytoadhesive protein) or bovine serum albumin (BSA-MP, non-specific protein) and their binding to epithelial cell monolayers was investigated under stationary and flow conditions. While mean numbers of 1500 +/- 307 mm(-2) WGA-MP and 94 +/- 64 mm(-2) BSA-MP respectively were detected to be cell-bound in the stationary setup, incubation at increasing flow velocities increasingly antagonized the attachment of both types of surface-modified particles. However, while binding of BSA-MP was totally inhibited by flow, grafting with WGA resulted in a pronounced anchoring effect. This was indicated by a mean number of 747 +/- 241 mm(-2) and 104 +/- 44 mm(-2) attached particles at shear rates of 0.2 s(-1) and 1 s(-1) respectively. Due to the compactness of the fluidic chip which favours parallelization, this setup represents a highly promising approach towards a screening platform for the performance of drug delivery vehicles under physiological flow conditions. In this regard, the flow-chip is expected to provide substantial information for the successful design and development of targeted micro- and nanoparticulate drug carrier systems.
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