Safety and efficacy of substance-based medical devices: Design of an in vitro barrier effect test

Rebecca Bassetto, Stefano Perin, E. Amadio, Samuele Zanatta, Davide Nenzioni, Walter Bertin
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Abstract

This study aims to develop an in vitro barrier effect test over biomimetic membrane, which is useful to establish the film forming ability of a substance-based medical device (SB-MD). The method contemplates a multiparametric approach including: i) the measurement of the transmembrane passage of a molecular-like marker over a lipid-impregnated biomimetic membrane (simulating the skin and gastro-intestinal and buccal tissues) by using a static diffusion cell apparatus (Franz cell); and ii) the evaluation of the integrity of the membrane (colorimetric test). In the first step, a series of lipid-impregnated biomimetic membranes (simulating gastro-intestinal, buccal, and skin tissues) were implemented and their permeability performance validated using model drugs (caffeine and acyclovir) by referring to literature data. As a result, the apparent permeability (Papp) of caffeine over the biomimetic gastro-intestinal membrane (Papp = 30.5E-6 cm/s) was roughly comparable to the literature values obtained with Caco-2 cell line membrane (Papp = 30.8E-6 cm/s) and with the Franz cell method (Papp = 36.2E-6 cm/s). Acyclovir was shown to be a poorly permeable substance both in the literature and experimental data. Following this step, the permeability study was extended to both biomimetic buccal and skin (STRAT-M®) membranes: for caffeine, biomimetic gastro-intestinal membrane was the most permeable (Papp = 30.5E-6 cm/s), followed by the buccal (Papp = 18.2E-6 cm/s) then the skin (Papp = 0.5E-6 cm/s) biomimetic membranes. In a second part of the work, the barrier effect test was developed following a similar permeability-like approach. The protocol was designed with the idea of assessing the capacity of a certain product to prevent the passage of caffeine across the biomimetic membrane with respect to a negative and positive control. The untreated membrane was the negative control, while membrane covered with a Vaseline film was the positive. As a last step, the developed barrier effect protocol was applied to an experimental gel-like SB-MD under development for the treatment of aphthae (Aphthae gel, an invented trade name), herein used as a case study. Regarding the results, Aphthae gel reduced the caffeine passage by 60.3%, thus highlighting its effectiveness to form a protective film. Overall, these results provide important knowledge and may pave the way for the use—including for industrial applications—of these simple but effective biomimetic membranes for carrying out high throughput screening necessary to design safe and effective SB-MDs before proceeding further with clinical trials, as requested by the regulations.
基于物质的医疗器械的安全性和有效性:体外屏障效应试验的设计
本研究旨在建立仿生膜的体外屏障效应试验,为建立物质基医疗器械(SB-MD)的成膜能力提供依据。该方法考虑了一种多参数方法,包括:i)通过使用静态扩散细胞装置(Franz细胞)测量分子样标记物在脂质浸渍仿生膜(模拟皮肤、胃肠道和颊组织)上的跨膜通道;ii)评价膜的完整性(比色试验)。第一步,制作一系列脂质浸渍的仿生膜(模拟胃肠道、口腔和皮肤组织),并参考文献资料,使用模型药物(咖啡因和阿昔洛韦)验证其渗透性。结果表明,咖啡因在仿生胃肠道膜(Papp = 30.5E-6 cm/s)上的表观通透性(Papp)与Caco-2细胞系膜(Papp = 30.8E-6 cm/s)和Franz细胞法(Papp = 36.2E-6 cm/s)的文献值大致相当。在文献和实验数据中,阿昔洛韦被证明是一种渗透性差的物质。在此步骤之后,渗透性研究扩展到仿生口腔和皮肤(STRAT-M®)膜:对于咖啡因,仿生胃肠道膜的渗透性最高(Papp = 30.5E-6 cm/s),其次是口腔(Papp = 18.2E-6 cm/s),然后是皮肤(Papp = 0.5E-6 cm/s)仿生膜。在第二部分的工作中,屏障效应测试采用了类似的渗透率测试方法。该方案的设计理念是评估某种产品的能力,以防止咖啡因通过仿生膜相对于阴性和阳性对照。未处理的膜为阴性对照,涂有凡士林膜的膜为阳性。作为最后一步,将开发的屏障效应方案应用于正在开发的用于治疗口疮的实验性凝胶样SB-MD (aphthae凝胶,发明的商品名),本文将其作为案例研究。结果显示,Aphthae凝胶减少了60.3%的咖啡因通道,从而突出了其形成保护膜的有效性。总的来说,这些结果提供了重要的知识,并可能为这些简单但有效的仿生膜的使用(包括工业应用)铺平道路,这些仿生膜可以在按照法规要求进行进一步临床试验之前进行高通量筛选,以设计安全有效的sb - md。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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