An interesting read:
Targeting Inflammatory Bowel Disease with Nano-in-Micro Composites
https://www.advancedsciencenews.com/targeting-inflammatory-bowel-disease-with-nano-in-micro-composites/The success of prodrugs, colonic-microflora-activated systems, and pH- and time-dependent systems for IBD treatment has been limited due to high inter-patient variability, in addition to several side effects as a result of systemic drug absorption. The main drawbacks of existing therapies are derived from the lack of selectivity between healthy and inflamed tissue.
A team of researchers including Prof. Hélder A. Santos and Dr. Wei Li from the University of Helsinki, Prof. Nadia Passerini from the University of Bologna, and their colleagues, have developed a targeted oral drug delivery system for treating IBD. A common feature in IBD is oxidative stress, and diseased sites present abnormally high reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels. They prepared oxidation-responsive nanoparticles (OxiDEX NPs) encapsulated by microfluidics in a pH-sensitive polymer to produce nano-in-micro composites, which are designed to protect the NPs against the harsh gastric environment and release them into the intestine.
Upon triggering by abnormally high ROS levels, the OxiDEX NPs release the drug to the inflamed tissues. The ROS-responsiveness ensures selective delivery of the drug to the site of action, but with very limited absorption. Compared to a traditional gastro-resistant formulation, this system shows a tenfold decrease in drug permeability across the intestinal cell monolayer, thus limiting the undesired systemic side effects.