AI Article Synopsis

  • Aqueous solutions of certain polymers can phase separate at higher temperatures, showing potential for biomedical uses such as controlled drug delivery and wound dressing.
  • The study focused on the pharmacokinetics of four thermoresponsive polyacrylamides after being injected into mice, revealing that they form drug reservoirs that dissolve over time with varying half-lives based on conditions.
  • Additionally, these polymers can create secondary depots in organs like the kidneys and liver, suggesting that their distribution and degradation rates can be optimized for specific medical applications.

Article Abstract

Aqueous solutions of some polymers exhibit a lower critical solution temperature (LCST); that is, they form phase-separated aggregates when heated above a threshold temperature. Such polymers found many promising (bio)medical applications, including in situ thermogelling with controlled drug release, polymer-supported radiotherapy (brachytherapy), immunotherapy, and wound dressing, among others. Yet, despite the extensive research on medicinal applications of thermoresponsive polymers, their biodistribution and fate after administration remained unknown. Thus, herein, they studied the pharmacokinetics of four different thermoresponsive polyacrylamides after intramuscular administration in mice. In vivo, these thermoresponsive polymers formed depots that subsequently dissolved with a two-phase kinetics (depot maturation, slow redissolution) with half-lives 2 weeks to 5 months, as depot vitrification prolonged their half-lives. Additionally, the decrease of T of a polymer solution increased the density of the intramuscular depot. Moreover, they detected secondary polymer depots in the kidneys and liver; these secondary depots also followed two-phase kinetics (depot maturation and slow dissolution), with half-lives 8 to 38 days (kidneys) and 15 to 22 days (liver). Overall, these findings may be used to tailor the properties of thermoresponsive polymers to meet the demands of their medicinal applications. Their methods may become a benchmark for future studies of polymer biodistribution.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11468617PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adhm.202201344DOI Listing

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