Microneedle Integrated Transdermal Patch for Fast
Onset and Sustained Delivery of Lidocaine
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Abstract
Lidocaine as an analgesic is of particular
interest in both acute
and chronic pain conditions and is used via injections or transdermal
patches. While injections are associated with problems such as patient
incompliance, topical administration of lidocaine using patches is
less efficient due to variability of drug absorption among individuals,
slower drug permeation through the skin, and hence a resultant undesirable
delay in analgesic effects. To address this clinical problem, we developed
a microneedle integrated transdermal patch (MITP), using a photolithography
based process, in which microneedles create micrometer-sized channels
in the skin to deliver lidocaine rapidly, while the reservoir patch
holding the bulk of the drug enables higher drug loading and carries
on to release the drug for prolonged periods. We demonstrated a new
approach of drug delivery using microneedles, where drugs diffuse
out of microneedles through the porous channels left by dissolving
drug particles. MITP was shown to be able to encapsulate up to 70
mg of lidocaine. <i>In vitro</i> permeation through rat
skin demonstrated that MITP delivered a significantly higher amount
of lidocaine than a commercial patch and with a faster onset of drug
permeation