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1st wireless drug-delivery chip shows promise to treat osteoporosis

Washington, Fri, 17 Feb 2012 ANI

Washington, Feb 17 (ANI): Researchers have developed a programmable, wirelessly controlled microchip to administer daily doses of an osteoporosis drug normally given by injection.

 

The results represent the first successful test of such a device and could help usher in a new era of telemedicine - delivering health care over a distance, Langer says.

 

"You could literally have a pharmacy on a chip," said Robert Langer, the David H. Koch Institute Professor at MIT.

 

"You can do remote control delivery, you can do pulsatile drug delivery, and you can deliver multiple drugs."

 

In the new study, funded and overseen by MicroCHIPS, scientists used the programmable implants to deliver an osteoporosis drug called teriparatide to seven women aged 65 to 70.

 

The study found that the device delivered dosages comparable to injections, and there were no adverse side effects.

 

These programmable chips could dramatically change treatment not only for osteoporosis, but also for many other diseases, including cancer and multiple sclerosis.

 

"Patients with chronic diseases, regular pain-management needs or other conditions that require frequent or daily injections could benefit from this technology," said Robert Farra, president and chief operating officer at MicroCHIPS and lead author of the paper.

 

"Compliance is very important in a lot of drug regimens, and it can be very difficult to get patients to accept a drug regimen where they have to give themselves injections," said Cima, the David H. Koch Professor of Engineering at MIT.

 

"This avoids the compliance issue completely, and points to a future where you have fully automated drug regimens."

 

The MIT research team started working on the implantable chip in the mid-1990s. John Santini, then a University of Michigan undergraduate visiting MIT, took it on as a summer project under the direction of Cima and Langer. Santini, who later returned to MIT as a graduate student to continue the project, is also an author of the new paper.

 

The company refined the chips, including adding a hermetic seal and a release system that works reliably in living tissue.

 

Teriparatide is a polypeptide and therefore much less chemically stable than small-molecule drugs, so sealing it hermetically to preserve it was an important achievement, Langer said.

 

The human clinical trial began in Denmark in January 2011. Chips were implanted during a 30-minute procedure at a doctor's office using local anesthetic, and remained in the patients for four months.

 

The implants proved safe, and patients reported they often forgot they even had the implant, Cima said.

 

Chips used in the study stored 20 doses of teriparatide, individually sealed in tiny reservoirs about the size of a pinprick.

 

The reservoirs are capped with a thin layer of platinum and titanium that melts when a small electrical current is applied, releasing the drug inside. MicroCHIPS is now working on developing implants that can carry hundreds of drug doses per chip.

 

Because the chips are programmable, dosages can be scheduled in advance or triggered remotely by radio communication over a special frequency called Medical Implant Communication Service (MICS). Current versions work over a distance of a few inches, but researchers plan to extend that range.

 

In the Science Translational Medicine study, the researchers measured bone formation in osteoporosis patients with the implants, and found that it was similar to that seen in patients receiving daily injections of teriparatide.

 

Another notable result is that the dosages given by implant had less variation than those given by injection.

 

Once a version of the implant that can carry a larger number of doses is ready, MicroCHIPS plans to seek approval for further clinical trials, Farra says.

 

The company has also developed a sensor that can monitor glucose levels. Eventually such sensors could be combined with chips that contain drug reservoirs, creating a chip that can adapt drug treatments in response to the patient's condition.

 

The study has been published in the online edition of Science Translational Medicine. (ANI)

 


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