Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy (Feb 2023)

Inhibition of proliferative vitreoretinopathy by a newly developed methotrexate loaded drug carrier in vitro

  • Sebastian S. Arrow,
  • Simone C. Felis,
  • Anna Hillenmayer,
  • Laura D. Strehle,
  • Susanna F. Koenig,
  • Efstathios Vounotrypidis,
  • Armin Wolf,
  • Christian M. Wertheimer

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 158
p. 114088

Abstract

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Purpose: Repeated intravitreal injections of methotrexate for proliferative vitreoretinopathy, a rare ocular condition that can cause vision loss, have shown beneficial effects in recent clinical studies. The purpose of this study was to develop a slow-release, long-term drug carrier composed of the polymer polylactide-co-glycolide and methotrexate that can be injected intravitreally. Methods: The required composition of the drug carrier was modeled using pharmacokinetic parameters based on current literature. Release kinetics were determined using an ocular pharmacokinetic model. Epiretinal PVR-membranes were harvested during pars plana vitrectomy and subsequently transferred to cell culture. The effect of the drug carrier on cell migration was investigated using time-lapse microscopy and a scratch-induced migration assay. The colorimetric WST-1-assay and a live-dead-assay were performed to determine viability, and the BrdU-assay was applied for proliferation. Results: The release profile showed an initial and a final burst of methotrexate with an intervening steady state that lasted 9–11 weeks. It showed inhibitory effects on pathobiological processes in human PVR-cells in vitro. Cell velocity in the time-lapse assay, migration in the scratch assay (p = 0.001), and proliferation in the BrdU assay (p = 0.027) were reduced after addition of the drug carrier. These effects occurred without causing a reduction in viability in the WST-1 assay (p > 0.99) and the live-dead assay. Conclusion: The methotrexate-loaded drug carrier can maintain a stable concentration for 9–11 weeks and influence the pathobiological process of PVR cells in vitro. Therefore, it represents a potential therapeutic orphan drug for PVR.

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