Exploring therapy transport from implantable medical devices using experimentally informed computational methods

Implantable medical devices that can facilitate therapy transport to localized sites are being developed for a number of diverse applications, including the treatment of diseases such as diabetes and cancer, and tissue regeneration after myocardial infraction. These implants can take the form of an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biomaterials science 2024-05, Vol.12 (11), p.2899-2913
Hauptverfasser: Trask, Lesley, Ward, Niamh A, Tarpey, Ruth, Beatty, Rachel, Wallace, Eimear, O'Dwyer, Joanne, Ronan, William, Duffy, Garry P, Dolan, Eimear B
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container_end_page 2913
container_issue 11
container_start_page 2899
container_title Biomaterials science
container_volume 12
creator Trask, Lesley
Ward, Niamh A
Tarpey, Ruth
Beatty, Rachel
Wallace, Eimear
O'Dwyer, Joanne
Ronan, William
Duffy, Garry P
Dolan, Eimear B
description Implantable medical devices that can facilitate therapy transport to localized sites are being developed for a number of diverse applications, including the treatment of diseases such as diabetes and cancer, and tissue regeneration after myocardial infraction. These implants can take the form of an encapsulation device which encases therapy in the form of drugs, proteins, cells, and bioactive agents, in semi-permeable membranes. Such implants have shown some success but the nature of these devices pose a barrier to the diffusion of vital factors, which is further exacerbated upon implantation due to the foreign body response (FBR). The FBR results in the formation of a dense hypo-permeable fibrous capsule around devices and is a leading cause of failure in many implantable technologies. One potential method for overcoming this diffusion barrier and enhancing therapy transport from the device is to incorporate local fluid flow. In this work, we used experimentally informed inputs to characterize the change in the fibrous capsule over time and quantified how this impacts therapy release from a device using computational methods. Insulin was used as a representative therapy as encapsulation devices for Type 1 diabetes are among the most-well characterised. We then explored how local fluid flow may be used to counteract these diffusion barriers, as well as how a more practical pulsatile flow regimen could be implemented to achieve similar results to continuous fluid flow. The generated model is a versatile tool toward informing future device design through its ability to capture the expected decrease in insulin release over time resulting from the FBR and investigate potential methods to overcome these effects. An experimentally informed device model capturing reduced factor transport resulting from the fibrous capsule (FC) and recovered using fluid flow.
doi_str_mv 10.1039/d4bm00107a
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Insulin was used as a representative therapy as encapsulation devices for Type 1 diabetes are among the most-well characterised. We then explored how local fluid flow may be used to counteract these diffusion barriers, as well as how a more practical pulsatile flow regimen could be implemented to achieve similar results to continuous fluid flow. The generated model is a versatile tool toward informing future device design through its ability to capture the expected decrease in insulin release over time resulting from the FBR and investigate potential methods to overcome these effects. 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source MEDLINE; Royal Society Of Chemistry Journals 2008-
subjects Diabetes
Diffusion
Diffusion barriers
Electronic implants
Encapsulation
Fluid flow
Foreign-Body Reaction
Humans
Insulin
Insulin - administration & dosage
Insulin - chemistry
Medical devices
Medical equipment
Permeability
Prostheses and Implants
Regeneration (physiology)
Therapy
Tissue engineering
title Exploring therapy transport from implantable medical devices using experimentally informed computational methods
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