TY - JOUR
T1 - 4D printing of biodegradable intestinal drug delivery devices with shape-memory effect
AU - Yuts, Yulia
AU - McCabe, Reece
AU - Krell, Maya
AU - Bohley, Marilena
AU - Leroux, Jean Christophe
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s)
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Expanding devices designed to physically facilitate the permeation of drugs across the gastrointestinal mucosa are gaining attention for the oral delivery of therapeutic macromolecules. The ideal system should be biodegradable with latex-like properties, allowing it to withstand gut movement without breaking prematurely and preventing intestinal obstruction or damage. A highly foldable and elastic device is desirable because it can fit into commercial capsules by being compressed into confined spaces. However, this compression has limits due to the device's tendency to spring back to its original shape driven by stored elastic energy after deformation. This challenge can be addressed by using shape-memory polymers. In this work, we report a photo-crosslinkable resin suitable for 3D printing by digital light processing that yields an elastomer with latex-like properties, shape-recovery at body temperature, and degradation within 6 h under simulated intestinal conditions. Thermal shape-memory was conferred by adding stearyl(acrylate) to poly(β-aminoester)-based inks, achieving high elasticity (>700 %) and strength (>7.5 MPa), along with strain-hardening properties.
AB - Expanding devices designed to physically facilitate the permeation of drugs across the gastrointestinal mucosa are gaining attention for the oral delivery of therapeutic macromolecules. The ideal system should be biodegradable with latex-like properties, allowing it to withstand gut movement without breaking prematurely and preventing intestinal obstruction or damage. A highly foldable and elastic device is desirable because it can fit into commercial capsules by being compressed into confined spaces. However, this compression has limits due to the device's tendency to spring back to its original shape driven by stored elastic energy after deformation. This challenge can be addressed by using shape-memory polymers. In this work, we report a photo-crosslinkable resin suitable for 3D printing by digital light processing that yields an elastomer with latex-like properties, shape-recovery at body temperature, and degradation within 6 h under simulated intestinal conditions. Thermal shape-memory was conferred by adding stearyl(acrylate) to poly(β-aminoester)-based inks, achieving high elasticity (>700 %) and strength (>7.5 MPa), along with strain-hardening properties.
KW - Biodegradable elastomers
KW - Four-dimensional printing
KW - Oral devices
KW - Shape-memory
KW - Vat photopolymerization
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2024.125051
DO - 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2024.125051
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 39645064
AN - SCOPUS:85211716053
SN - 0378-5173
VL - 669
JO - International Journal of Pharmaceutics
JF - International Journal of Pharmaceutics
M1 - 125051
ER -