We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content and advertising. To learn more, click here. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies. Cookie Policy.

HospiMedica

Download Mobile App
Recent News AI Critical Care Surgical Techniques Patient Care Health IT Point of Care Business Focus

New Drug-Delivery Device Could Replace Injections

By HospiMedica International staff writers
Posted on 15 Oct 2014
An innovative capsule coated with tiny needles can deliver drugs directly into the lining of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract.

Researchers at MIT (Cambridge, MA, USA) and Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH; Boston, MA, USA) have devised a novel acrylic drug capsule, two centimeters long and one centimeter in diameter, which includes a drug reservoir and is coated with hollow, stainless steel needles about five millimeters long. A pH-sensitive coating that surrounds the capsule dissolves in the GI tract, allowing the drug to be released through the micro-needles. To test whether the capsule allows safe and effective drug delivery, the researchers tested it in pigs, with insulin as the drug payload.

Image: A schematic drawing of a micro-needle pill with hollow needles (Photo courtesy of Christine Daniloff/MIT).
Image: A schematic drawing of a micro-needle pill with hollow needles (Photo courtesy of Christine Daniloff/MIT).

It took more than a week for the capsules to move through the entire digestive tract, successfully injecting insulin into the lining of the stomach, small intestine, and colon, causing the animals’ blood glucose levels to drop. The reduction in blood glucose was faster and larger than the drop seen when the same amount of insulin was given by a subcutaneous injection. The researchers found no traces of tissue damage, supporting the potential safety of the approach. The study was published on September 22, 2014, in the Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences.

“This could be a way that the patient can circumvent the need to have an infusion or subcutaneous administration of a drug,” said lead author gastroenterologist Giovanni Traverso, MD, of MGH. “The kinetics are much better, and much faster-onset, than those seen with traditional under-the-skin administration. For molecules that are particularly difficult to absorb, this would be a way of actually administering them at much higher efficiency.”

While both patients and physicians prefer the oral route of drug delivery, the GI tract itself limits deliverability of the biologic class of therapeutics, whose large size makes them non-absorbable. And due to its protease and bacteria-rich environment, as well as general pH variability, an extreme environment is created which degrades the biologics by acid and enzyme activity that make them inactive before they can take effect.

Previous studies of accidental ingestion of sharp objects in human patients have suggested that it could be safe to swallow a capsule coated with short needles. Because there are no pain receptors in the GI tract, patients would not feel any pain from the drug injection.

Related Links:

MIT
Massachusetts General Hospital



Gold Member
Real-Time Diagnostics Onscreen Viewer
GEMweb Live
Gold Member
STI Test
Vivalytic Sexually Transmitted Infection (STI) Array
Silver Member
Compact 14-Day Uninterrupted Holter ECG
NR-314P
New
Anesthesia Cart
UMGSA-33369-VIL

Latest Critical Care News

Stretchable Microneedles to Help In Accurate Tracking of Abnormalities and Identifying Rapid Treatment

Machine Learning Tool Identifies Rare, Undiagnosed Immune Disorders from Patient EHRs

On-Skin Wearable Bioelectronic Device Paves Way for Intelligent Implants