First-line cancer chemotherapy has been prescribed for patients suffered from cancers for many years. However, conventional chemotherapy provides a high parenteral dosage of anticancer drugs over a short period, which may cause serious toxicities and detrimental side effects in healthy tissues. This study aims to develop a new drug delivery system (DDS) composed of double-walled microparticles and an injectable hydrogel for localized dual-agent drug delivery to tumors. The uniform double-walled microparticles loaded with cisplatin (Cis-DDP) and paclitaxel (PTX) were fabricated via coaxial electrohydrodynamic atomization (CEHDA) technique and subsequently were embedded into injectable alginate-branched polyethylenimine. The findings show the uniqueness of CEHDA technique for simply swapping the place of drugs to achieve a parallel or a sequential release profile. This study also presents the simulation of CEHDA technique using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) that will help in the optimization of CEHDA's operating conditions prior to large-scale production of microparticles. The new synthetic hydrogel provides an additional diffusion barrier against Cis-DDP and confines premature release of drugs. In addition, the hydrogel can provide a versatile tool for retaining particles in the tumor resected cavity during the injection after debulking surgery and preventing surgical site infection due to its inherent antibacterial properties. Three-dimensional MDA-MB-231 (breast cancer) spheroid studies demonstrate a superior efficacy and a greater reduction in spheroid growth for drugs released from the proposed composite formulation over a prolonged period, as compared with free drug treatment. Overall, the new core-shell microparticles embedded into injectable hydrogel can serve as a flexible controlled release platform for modulating the release profiles of anticancer drugs and subsequently providing a superior anticancer response.
The management and disposal of livestock manure has become one of the top environmental issues at a global scale in line with the tremendous growth of poultry industry over the past decades. In this work, a potential alternative method for the disposal of chicken manure from Singapore local hen layer farms was studied. Gasification was proposed as the green technology to convert chicken manure into clean energy. Through gasification experiments in a 10 kW fixed bed downdraft gasifier, it was found that chicken manure was indeed a compatible feedstock for gasification in the presence of wood waste. The co-gasification of 30 wt% chicken manure and 70 wt% wood waste produced syngas of comparable quality to that of gasification of pure wood waste, with a syngas lower heating value (LHV) of 5.23 MJ/Nm 3 and 4.68 MJ/Nm 3 , respectively. Furthermore, the capability of the gasification derived biochar in the removal of an emerging contaminant (artificial sweetener such as Acesulfame, Saccharin and Cyclamate) via adsorption was also conducted in the second part of this study. The results showed that the biochar was effective in the removal of the contaminant and the mechanism of adsorption of artificial sweetener by biochar was postulated to be likely via electrostatic interaction as well as specific interaction. Finally, we conducted a cost-benefit analysis for the deployment of a gasification system in a hen layer farm using a Monte Carlo simulation model.
Triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) is an aggressive sub-type of breast cancer that rarely responds to conventional chemotherapy. Therefore, novel agents or new routes need to be developed to improve treatment efficacy and diminish severe side-effects of anti-cancer agents in TNBC patients. This study explores a novel localized co-delivery platform with potential application against TNBC. Uniform core-shell microparticles encapsulating cisplatin (Cis-DDP) and paclitaxel (PTX) are fabricated using coaxial electrohydrodynamic atomization technique and subsequently are embedded into an injectable hydrogel. The hydrogel provides an additional diffusion barrier against Cis-DDP and confines premature release of drugs. In addition, the hydrogel can provide a versatile tool for retaining particles in the tumor resected cavity during the injection following debulking surgery and prevent surgical site infection due to its inherent antibacterial properties. The combination of Cis-DDP and PTX demonstrates a synergistic effect against MDA-MB-231 cell line assigned to three different mechanisms of action, including denaturation of DNA strands, stabilization of microtubules, and amplification of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) and activation of caspase-3 pathways. The results show a significant accumulation of mitochondrial ROS insults in cells upon treatment that consequently causes programmed cells death. The performance of microparticles/hydrogel carrier is evaluated against three-dimensional MDA-MB-231 (breast cancer) 3D spheroids, where a superior efficacy and a greater reduction in spheroid growth are observed over 14 days, as compared with free-drug treatment. Overall, drug-loaded core-shell microparticles embedded into injectable hydrogel provides a promising strategy to treat aggressive cancers and a modular platform for a broad range of localized multidrug therapies customizable to the cancer type.
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