Fabrication and Characterisation of 3D-Printed Triamcinolone Acetonide-Loaded Polycaprolactone-Based Ocular Implants

Triamcinolone acetonide (TA) is a corticosteroid that has been used to treat posterior segment eye diseases. TA is injected intravitreally in the management of neovascular disorders; however, frequent intravitreal injections result in many potential side effects and poor patient compliance. In this work, a 3D bioprinter was used to prepare polycaprolactone (PCL) implants loaded with TA. Implants were manufactured with different shapes (filament-, rectangular-, and circle-shaped) and drug loadings (5, 10, and 20%). The characterisation results showed that TA was successfully mixed and incorporated within the PCL matrix without using solvents, and drug content reached almost 100% for all formulations.

The drug release data demonstrate that the filament-shaped implants (SA/V ratio~7.3) showed the highest cumulative drug release amongst all implant shapes over 180 days, followed by rectangular- (SA/V ratio~3.7) and circle-shaped implants (SA/V ratio~2.80). Most implant drug release data best fit the Korsmeyer–Peppas model, indicating that diffusion was the prominent release mechanism. Additionally, a biocompatibility study was performed; the results showed >90% cell viability, thus proving that the TA-loaded PCL implants were safe for ocular application.

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Annuryanti, F.; Domínguez-Robles, J.; Anjani, Q.K.; Adrianto, M.F.; Larrañeta, E.; Thakur, R.R.S. Fabrication and Characterisation of 3D-Printed Triamcinolone Acetonide-Loaded Polycaprolactone-Based Ocular Implants. Pharmaceutics 202315, 243. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics15010243


See also the interesting article on 3D printed ocular inserts

Design and optimization of ciprofloxacin hydrochloride biodegradable 3D printed ocular inserts_Full factorial design and in-vitro and ex-vivo evaluations_Part II

 

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