RMIT University
Browse

Shear-sensitive nanocapsule drug release for site-specific inhibition of occlusive thrombus formation

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 02:58 authored by C Molloy, Y Yao, H Kammoun, T Bonnard, T Hoefer, Karen Alt, Francisco Tovar LopezFrancisco Tovar Lopez, Gary RosengartenGary Rosengarten, Paul RamslandPaul Ramsland, A Van Der Meer, A Van Den Berg, A Murphy, C Hagemeyer, Karlheinz Peter, E Westein
Essentials: Vessel stenosis due to large thrombus formation increases local shear 1-2 orders of magnitude. High shear at stenotic sites was exploited to trigger eptifibatide release from nanocapsules. Local delivery of eptifibatide prevented vessel occlusion without increased tail bleeding times. Local nanocapsule delivery of eptifibatide may be safer than systemic antiplatelet therapies. Summary: Background: Myocardial infarction and stroke remain the leading causes of mortality and morbidity. The major limitation of current antiplatelet therapy is that the effective concentrations are limited because of bleeding complications. Targeted delivery of antiplatelet drug to sites of thrombosis would overcome these limitations. Objectives: Here, we have exploited a key biomechanical feature specific to thrombosis, i.e. significantly increased blood shear stress resulting from a reduction in the lumen of the vessel, to achieve site-directed delivery of the clinically used antiplatelet agent eptifibatide by using shear-sensitive phosphatidylcholine (PC)-based nanocapsules. Methods: PC-based nanocapsules (2.8 × 1012) with high-dose encapsulated eptifibatide were introduced into microfluidic blood perfusion assays and into in vivo models of thrombosis and tail bleeding. Results: Shear-triggered nanocapsule delivery of eptifibatide inhibited in vitro thrombus formation selectively under stenotic and high shear flow conditions above a shear rate of 1000 s-1 while leaving thrombus formation under physiologic shear rates unaffected. Thrombosis was effectively prevented in in vivo models of vessel wall damage. Importantly, mice infused with shear-sensitive antiplatelet nanocapsules did not show prolonged bleeding times. Conclusions: Targeted delivery of eptifibatide by shear-sensitive nanocapsules offers site-specific antiplatelet potential, and may form a basis for developing more potent and safer antiplatelet drugs.

History

Journal

Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis

Volume

15

Start page

972

End page

982

Total pages

11

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell Publishing

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2017 International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis

Former Identifier

2006073304

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-05-23

Usage metrics

    Scholarly Works

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC