Generic placeholder image

Current Drug Targets

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1389-4501
ISSN (Online): 1873-5592

Biomedical Imaging in Implantable Drug Delivery Systems

Author(s): Haoyan Zhou, Christopher Hernandez, Monika Goss, Anna Gawlik and Agata A. Exner

Volume 16, Issue 6, 2015

Page: [672 - 682] Pages: 11

DOI: 10.2174/1389450115666141122211920

Price: $65

Abstract

Implantable drug delivery systems (DDS) provide a platform for sustained release of therapeutic agents over a period of weeks to months and sometimes years. Such strategies are typically used clinically to increase patient compliance by replacing frequent administration of drugs such as contraceptives and hormones to maintain plasma concentration within the therapeutic window. Implantable or injectable systems have also been investigated as a means of local drug administration which favors high drug concentration at a site of interest, such as a tumor, while reducing systemic drug exposure to minimize unwanted side effects. Significant advances in the field of local DDS have led to increasingly sophisticated technology with new challenges including quantification of local and systemic pharmacokinetics and implant- body interactions. Because many of these sought-after parameters are highly dependent on the tissue properties at the implantation site, and rarely represented adequately with in vitro models, new nondestructive techniques that can be used to study implants in situ are highly desirable. Versatile imaging tools can meet this need and provide quantitative data on morphological and functional aspects of implantable systems. The focus of this review article is an overview of current biomedical imaging techniques, including magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), ultrasound imaging, optical imaging, X-ray and computed tomography (CT), and their application in evaluation of implantable DDS.

Keywords: Biomaterials, drug delivery, fluorescence imaging, implant, MRI (magnetic resonance imaging), scaffold, ultrasound imaging, X-ray CT Imaging.

« Previous

Rights & Permissions Print Cite
© 2024 Bentham Science Publishers | Privacy Policy