Hydrogel-Forming Microneedle Arrays Allow Detection of Drugs and Glucose In Vivo: Potential for Use in Diagnosis and Therapeutic Drug Monitoring

We describe, for the first time the use of hydrogel-forming microneedle (MN) arrays for minimally-invasive extraction and quantification of drug substances and glucose from skin in vitro and in vivo. MN prepared from aqueous blends of hydrolysed poly(methyl-vinylether-co-maleic anhydride) (11.1% w/w...

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Published inPloS one Vol. 10; no. 12; p. e0145644
Main Authors Caffarel-Salvador, Ester, Brady, Aaron J., Eltayib, Eyman, Meng, Teng, Alonso-Vicente, Ana, Gonzalez-Vazquez, Patricia, Torrisi, Barbara M., Vicente-Perez, Eva Maria, Mooney, Karen, Jones, David S., Bell, Steven E. J., McCoy, Colin P., McCarthy, Helen O., McElnay, James C., Donnelly, Ryan F.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Public Library of Science 30.12.2015
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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ISSN1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI10.1371/journal.pone.0145644

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Summary:We describe, for the first time the use of hydrogel-forming microneedle (MN) arrays for minimally-invasive extraction and quantification of drug substances and glucose from skin in vitro and in vivo. MN prepared from aqueous blends of hydrolysed poly(methyl-vinylether-co-maleic anhydride) (11.1% w/w) and poly(ethyleneglycol) 10,000 daltons (5.6% w/w) and crosslinked by esterification swelled upon skin insertion by uptake of fluid. Post-removal, theophylline and caffeine were extracted from MN and determined using HPLC, with glucose quantified using a proprietary kit. In vitro studies using excised neonatal porcine skin bathed on the underside by physiologically-relevant analyte concentrations showed rapid (5 min) analyte uptake. For example, mean concentrations of 0.16 μg/mL and 0.85 μg/mL, respectively, were detected for the lowest (5 μg/mL) and highest (35 μg/mL) Franz cell concentrations of theophylline after 5 min insertion. A mean concentration of 0.10 μg/mL was obtained by extraction of MN inserted for 5 min into skin bathed with 5 μg/mL caffeine, while the mean concentration obtained by extraction of MN inserted into skin bathed with 15 μg/mL caffeine was 0.33 μg/mL. The mean detected glucose concentration after 5 min insertion into skin bathed with 4 mmol/L was 19.46 nmol/L. The highest theophylline concentration detected following extraction from a hydrogel-forming MN inserted for 1 h into the skin of a rat dosed orally with 10 mg/kg was of 0.363 μg/mL, whilst a maximum concentration of 0.063 μg/mL was detected following extraction from a MN inserted for 1 h into the skin of a rat dosed with 5 mg/kg theophylline. In human volunteers, the highest mean concentration of caffeine detected using MN was 91.31 μg/mL over the period from 1 to 2 h post-consumption of 100 mg Proplus® tablets. The highest mean blood glucose level was 7.89 nmol/L detected 1 h following ingestion of 75 g of glucose, while the highest mean glucose concentration extracted from MN was 4.29 nmol/L, detected after 3 hours skin insertion in human volunteers. Whilst not directly correlated, concentrations extracted from MN were clearly indicative of trends in blood in both rats and human volunteers. This work strongly illustrates the potential of hydrogel-forming MN in minimally-invasive patient monitoring and diagnosis. Further studies are now ongoing to reduce clinical insertion times and develop mathematical algorithms enabling determination of blood levels directly from MN measurements.
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Competing Interests: Ryan Donnelly is a named inventor on a patent application related to polymeric microneedle arrays (details below). He is working with a number of companies with a view to commercialisation of this technology. Professor Donnelly provides consultancy services and advice to Swedish Pharma AB and Xiomateria Ltd. Notably, neither of these companies has interests in microneedle-mediated monitoring/diagnosis. This does not alter the authors’ adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials. None of the other authors have any competing interests. Donnelly, R.F., Woolfson A.D., McCarron, P.A., Morrow, D.I.J. Morrissey, A. (2007). Microneedles/Delivery Device and Method. British Patent Application No 0718996.2. Filed September 28th 2007. International publication No WO2009040548. Approved for grant in Japan and China. US, Europe, India and Australia pending.
These authors are joint first authors on this work.
Conceived and designed the experiments: RFD JCM CPM HOM SEJB DSJ. Performed the experiments: AJB ECS EVP PGV EE KM AAV TM BMT. Analyzed the data: RFD JCM AJB ECS EE. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: RFD JCM AJB ECS EE. Wrote the paper: RFD JCM AJB ECS EE.
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0145644