Two-photon polymerisation 3D printing of microneedle array templates with versatile designs : application in the development of polymeric drug delivery systems
Cordeiro, Ana Sara and Tekko, Ismaiel A. and Jomaa, Mohamed H. and Vora, Lalitkumar and McAlister, Emma and Volpe-Zanutto, Fabiana and Nethery, Matthew and Baine, Paul T. and Mitchell, Neil and McNeill, David W. and Donnelly, Ryan F. (2020) Two-photon polymerisation 3D printing of microneedle array templates with versatile designs : application in the development of polymeric drug delivery systems. Pharmaceutical Research, 37 (9). 174. ISSN 0724-8741 (https://doi.org/10.1007/s11095-020-02887-9)
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Abstract
Purpose: To apply a simple and flexible manufacturing technique, two-photon polymerisation (2PP), to the fabrication of microneedle (MN) array templates with high precision and low cost in a short time. Methods: Seven different MN array templates were produced by 2PP 3D printing, varying needle height (900–1300 μm), shape (conical, pyramidal, cross-shaped and with pedestal), base width (300–500 μm) and interspacing (100–500 μm). Silicone MN array moulds were fabricated from these templates and used to produce dissolving and hydrogel-forming MN arrays. These polymeric MN arrays were evaluated for their insertion in skin models and their ability to deliver model drugs (cabotegravir sodium and ibuprofen sodium) to viable layers of the skin (ex vivo and in vitro) for subsequent controlled release and/or absorption. Results: The various templates obtained with 2PP 3D printing allowed the reproducible fabrication of multiple MN array moulds. The polymeric MN arrays produced were efficiently inserted into two different skin models, with sharp conical and pyramidal needles showing the highest insertion depth values (64–90% of needle height). These results correlated generally with ex vivo and in vitro drug delivery results, where the same designs showed higher drug delivery rates after 24 h of application. Conclusion: This work highlights the benefits of using 2PP 3D printing to prototype variable MN array designs in a simple and reproducible manner, for their application in drug delivery.
ORCID iDs
Cordeiro, Ana Sara
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Item type: Article ID code: 92828 Dates: DateEvent1 September 2020Published20 July 2020AcceptedSubjects: Medicine > Pharmacy and materia medica Department: Faculty of Science > Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 13 May 2025 14:26 Last modified: 14 May 2025 00:56 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/92828