Modeling drug release through stimuli responsive polymer hydrogels.

Aditya Pareek, Shantanu Maheshwari, Sivakumar Cherlo, Rama Subba Reddy Thavva, Venkataramana Runkana
Author Information
  1. Aditya Pareek: TCS Research, Tata Consultancy Services Ltd., Tata Research Development and Design Centre, 54-B, Hadapsar Industrial Estate, Pune 411013, India.
  2. Shantanu Maheshwari: TCS Research, Tata Consultancy Services Ltd., Tata Research Development and Design Centre, 54-B, Hadapsar Industrial Estate, Pune 411013, India.
  3. Sivakumar Cherlo: TCS Research, Tata Consultancy Services Ltd., Tata Research Development and Design Centre, 54-B, Hadapsar Industrial Estate, Pune 411013, India.
  4. Rama Subba Reddy Thavva: TCS Research, Tata Consultancy Services Ltd., Tata Research Development and Design Centre, 54-B, Hadapsar Industrial Estate, Pune 411013, India.
  5. Venkataramana Runkana: TCS Research, Tata Consultancy Services Ltd., Tata Research Development and Design Centre, 54-B, Hadapsar Industrial Estate, Pune 411013, India. Electronic address: venkat.runkana@tcs.com.

Abstract

There is a rising interest in stimuli-responsive hydrogels to achieve controlled and self-regulated drug delivery. Stimuli responsive polymer hydrogels with their ability to swell/de-swell under varying pH conditions present themselves as a potential candidate for controlled drug delivery. It is important to develop a mechanistic understanding of the underlying phenomena that will help suggest ways to control the drug release from a polymer hydrogel. We present a mathematical model that couples Nernst-Planck, Poisson and force balance equations to incorporate diffusion of ionic species and drug along with deformation of hydrogel under osmotic pressure. The model can be used to simulate swelling behaviour of the hydrogel along with the kinetics of drug release. It has been validated with published experimental data for swelling of polyhydroxyl methacrylate-co-methacrylic acid (pHEMA-co-MA) gels and release kinetics of Phenylpropanolamine from these gels. Effect of formulation parameters such as polymer concentration and cross-linker concentration has also been evaluated. The model can be used to reduce the number of exploratory experiments required during design of a drug delivery system.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Drug Delivery Systems
Drug Liberation
Hydrogels
Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
Models, Theoretical
Polymers
Polymethacrylic Acids

Chemicals

Hydrogels
Polymers
Polymethacrylic Acids

Word Cloud

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