JOURNAL ARTICLE

Hydrogel‐Forming Microneedle Arrays for Enhanced Transdermal Drug Delivery

Abstract

Abstract Unique microneedle arrays prepared from crosslinked polymers, which contain no drug themselves, are described. They rapidly take up skin interstitial fluid upon skin insertion to form continuous, unblockable, hydrogel conduits from attached patch‐type drug reservoirs to the dermal microcirculation. Importantly, such microneedles, which can be fabricated in a wide range of patch sizes and microneedle geometries, can be easily sterilized, resist hole closure while in place, and are removed completely intact from the skin. Delivery of macromolecules is no longer limited to what can be loaded into the microneedles themselves and transdermal drug delivery is now controlled by the crosslink density of the hydrogel system rather than the stratum corneum, while electrically modulated delivery is also a unique feature. This technology has the potential to overcome the limitations of conventional microneedle designs and greatly increase the range of the type of drug that is deliverable transdermally, with ensuing benefits for industry, healthcare providers and, ultimately, patients.

Keywords:
Transdermal Materials science Stratum corneum Drug delivery Nanotechnology Biomedical engineering Drug Pharmacology Medicine

Metrics

651
Cited By
9.81
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
37
Refs
0.99
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Advancements in Transdermal Drug Delivery
Life Sciences →  Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics →  Pharmaceutical Science
Dermatology and Skin Diseases
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Dermatology
Advanced Drug Delivery Systems
Life Sciences →  Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics →  Pharmaceutical Science
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