Pharmaceutics (May 2021)

The Chronotopic™ System for Pulsatile and Colonic Delivery of Active Molecules in the Era of Precision Medicine: Feasibility by 3D Printing via Fused Deposition Modeling (FDM)

  • Alice Melocchi,
  • Marco Uboldi,
  • Francesco Briatico-Vangosa,
  • Saliha Moutaharrik,
  • Matteo Cerea,
  • Anastasia Foppoli,
  • Alessandra Maroni,
  • Luca Palugan,
  • Lucia Zema,
  • Andrea Gazzaniga

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics13050759
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5
p. 759

Abstract

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The pulsatile-release Chronotopic™ system was conceived of as a drug-containing core surrounded by a coat made of swellable/soluble hydrophilic polymers, the latter being able to provide a programmable lag phase prior to drug liberation. This system was also proposed in a colon-targeting configuration, entailing a gastroresistant film to prevent early interaction of the inner coat with gastric fluids and enabling the attainment of a lag phase matching the small intestinal transit time. Over the years, various multiple-step manufacturing processes have been tested for the fabrication of the Chronotopic™ system in both its configurations. This work focused on the evaluation of 3D printing by fused deposition modeling in view of its potential towards product personalization, on demand one-step manufacturing and efficient scale down of batches. The feasibility of each part of the Chronotopic™ system was independently investigated starting from in-house made filaments, characterizing the resulting specimens for physico-technological and performance characteristics. The printing parameters identified as suitable during the set-up phase were then used to fabricate prototypes either in a single step for the pulsatile configuration or following two different fabrication approaches for the colon-targeting one.

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