Pharmaceutics (May 2021)

Breath-Triggered Drug Release System for Preterm Neonates

  • Felix C. Wiegandt,
  • Ulrich P. Froriep,
  • Fabian Müller,
  • Theodor Doll,
  • Andreas Dietzel,
  • Gerhard Pohlmann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics13050657
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5
p. 657

Abstract

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A major disadvantage of inhalation therapy with continuous drug delivery is the loss of medication during expiration. Developing a breath-triggered drug release system can highly decrease this loss. However, there is currently no breath-triggered drug release directly inside the patient interface (nasal prong) for preterm neonates available due to their high breathing frequency, short inspiration time and low tidal volume. Therefore, a nasal prong with an integrated valve releasing aerosol directly inside the patient interface increasing inhaled aerosol efficiency is desirable. We integrated a miniaturized aerosol valve into a nasal prong, controlled by a double-stroke cylinder. Breathing was simulated using a test lung for preterm neonates on CPAP respiratory support. The inhalation flow served as a trigger signal for the valve, releasing humidified surfactant. Particle detection was performed gravimetrically (filter) and optically (light extinction). The integrated miniaturized aerosol valve enabled breath-triggered drug release inside the patient interface with an aerosol valve response time of 4 compared to non-triggered release. This novel nasal prong with integrated valve allows breath-triggered drug release directly inside the nasal prong with short response time.

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