Microfabricated needles for transdermal delivery of macromolecules and nanoparticles: Fabrication methods and transport studies

Devin V. McAllister(Georgia Institute of Technology), Ping M. Wang(Georgia Institute of Technology), Shawn P. Davis(Georgia Institute of Technology), Jung‐Hwan Park(Georgia Institute of Technology), Paul J. Canatella(Georgia Institute of Technology), Mark G. Allen(Georgia Institute of Technology), Mark R. Prausnitz(Georgia Institute of Technology)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
November 17, 2003
Cited by 842Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Arrays of micrometer-scale needles could be used to deliver drugs, proteins, and particles across skin in a minimally invasive manner. We therefore developed microfabrication techniques for silicon, metal, and biodegradable polymer microneedle arrays having solid and hollow bores with tapered and beveled tips and feature sizes from 1 to 1,000 microm. When solid microneedles were used, skin permeability was increased in vitro by orders of magnitude for macromolecules and particles up to 50 nm in radius. Intracellular delivery of molecules into viable cells was also achieved with high efficiency. Hollow microneedles permitted flow of microliter quantities into skin in vivo, including microinjection of insulin to reduce blood glucose levels in diabetic rats.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis