Molecules (Mar 2020)

Pre-Clinical Investigation of Keratose as an Excipient of Drug Coated Balloons

  • Emily Goel,
  • Megan Erwin,
  • Claire V. Cawthon,
  • Carson Schaff,
  • Nathaniel Fedor,
  • Trevor Rayl,
  • Onree Wilson,
  • Uwe Christians,
  • Thomas C. Register,
  • Randolph L. Geary,
  • Justin Saul,
  • Saami K. Yazdani

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules25071596
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 7
p. 1596

Abstract

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Background: Drug-coated balloons (DCBs), which deliver anti-proliferative drugs with the aid of excipients, have emerged as a new endovascular therapy for the treatment of peripheral arterial disease. In this study, we evaluated the use of keratose (KOS) as a novel DCB-coating excipient to deliver and retain paclitaxel. Methods: A custom coating method was developed to deposit KOS and paclitaxel on uncoated angioplasty balloons. The retention of the KOS-paclitaxel coating, in comparison to a commercially available DCB, was evaluated using a novel vascular-motion simulating ex vivo flow model at 1 h and 3 days. Additionally, the locoregional biological response of the KOS-paclitaxel coating was evaluated in a rabbit ilio-femoral injury model at 14 days. Results: The KOS coating exhibited greater retention of the paclitaxel at 3 days under pulsatile conditions with vascular motion as compared to the commercially available DCB (14.89 ± 4.12 ng/mg vs. 0.60 ± 0.26 ng/mg, p = 0.018). Histological analysis of the KOS–paclitaxel-treated arteries demonstrated a significant reduction in neointimal thickness as compared to the uncoated balloons, KOS-only balloon and paclitaxel-only balloon. Conclusions: The ability to enhance drug delivery and retention in targeted arterial segments can ultimately improve clinical peripheral endovascular outcomes.

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