PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT
Every day, an estimated 3.9 billion people take medication to treat acute or chronic conditions. However, despite
the enormous utility of current pharmaceuticals, they are limited by several factors that prevent their more
effective and expanded use. Ideally, drugs would reach the desired concentration at the site of action for the
duration that the therapy is required. In practice, this is difficult because the body is constantly metabolizing and
excreting drugs, which necessitates re-administration. Depending on a drug’s therapeutic window and biological
half-life, frequent administration may be required, which lowers patients’ adherence to their dosing regimens.
This issue is pervasive with non-adherence rates as high as 50% for chronic diseases, leading to increased
morbidity and mortality and as much as $290 billion in added healthcare costs each year in the U.S. alone. The
field of pharmaceutics has developed formulation methods that reduce administration frequency, including
injectable controlled-release systems composed of drug embedded in biodegradable materials. Unfortunately,
current clinically-approved systems are limited in both the types of molecules that they can deliver and the drug
release kinetics they can achieve. This proposal seeks to develop parenteral drug delivery strategies that
enhance safety and efficacy, improve patient adherence, and enable the sustained release of biological drugs.
We hypothesize that emerging nanofabrication methods (e.g. multi-photon 3D printing) can be used to control
the structure—and thus behavior—of surface-eroding particles containing drug. Because the degradation of
these hydrophobic materials is confined to the surface, drug distributed homogeneously throughout their volume
will be released at a rate proportional to their erosion rate and exposed surface area. Using these methods, we
can model and rationally design microparticle structures that release drug at predictable, geometrically-defined
rates. Although this concept could be applied to achieve a wide array of release kinetics, we are most interested
in attaining zero-order release kinetics, which are desirable for most diseases, and sequential release, which
may be useful for dynamic conditions. Further, because surface eroding materials exclude water, their interior
microenvironment will remain dry and neutral, thus promoting the stability of encapsulated biologics at 37°C. The
features of surface-eroding microparticles run in stark contrast with existing FDA-approved microparticles
composed of bulk-degrading polymers that absorb water and produce acidic degradation products, which makes
it impossible to predict release kinetics a priori, contributes to the degradation of encapsulated biologics, and
prevents sequential release. The strategies we propose are only now possible due to the convergence of
advances in manufacturing and chemistry that allow us to exploit structure-function relationships at a scale small
enough to retain microparticle injectability. If successful, this approach has the ability to fundamentally change
how drugs are administered and improve patient outcomes across all of medicine.