This application relates to the apparatus to characterize injection-induced pain and discomfort. Particularly, a platform to quantify spatiotemporal tissue swelling during injection of biologics is disclosed herein.
Recent emergence in biologics provides effective solutions to treat a variety of diseases that presently have no other treatment options available [1]. These include vaccines, blood and blood components, somatic cells, tissues, and recombinant therapeutic proteins. Biologics can be composed of sugars, proteins, or nucleic acids or complex combinations of these substances, or may be living entities such as cells and tissues. Typical delivery routes of biologics are injection or intravenous infusion. Because of large molecular weight of these biologics, however, effective administration of this type of drugs pose significant challenges. Particularly, pain and discomfort induced during subcutaneous (SQ) injection of biologics pose significant challenges to broader use of biologic drugs, design and development of injection and infusion devices, and quality of patient's life [2]. Thus, it is critically important to be able to assess and quantify the extent of the injection-induced pain and discomfort (IPD). However, current available methods are mostly very subjective and inadequate to quantify the extent of IPD.
In this study, we develop a new biomimetic platform to quantify spatiotemporal tissue swelling during injection of biologics, and to predict associated increase in mechanical stress and interstitial fluid pressure (IFP) of tissues.
IPD is likely caused by tissue swelling and subsequent increase in mechanical stress and IFP of tissues near injection sites. This mechanical stress and fluid pressure stimulate nociceptors, which are primarily present at the dermis of the skin. Accurate measure and estimation of tissue swelling, thus, can be a quantitative and predictive indicator of the IPD. Thus, we construct and test an experimental setup capable of measuring injection-induce swelling of engineered tissue constructs.
These and other features, aspects and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with reference to the following figures, associated descriptions and claims.
While the concepts of the present disclosure are illustrated and described in detail in the figures and the description herein, results in the figures and their description are to be considered as exemplary and not restrictive in character; it being understood that only the illustrative embodiments are shown and described and that all changes and modifications that come within the spirit of the disclosure are desired to be protected.
Unless defined otherwise, the scientific and technology nomenclatures have the same meaning as commonly understood by a person in the ordinary skill in the art pertaining to this disclosure.
Methods
A schematic of the testing platform is shown in
The detailed description of the construction of engineered tissues can be found in our prior publications [2, 3]. Briefly, the early human foreskin fibroblasts were cultured up to 17th passage and consistently harvested at 80˜90% confluency. The collected cells were labeled with quantum dots by being mixed with the labeling solution and incubated for 45 min. After incubation, the cells were washed twice to remove the excess quantum dots. To construct the engineered tissue mimicking the dermal layer of skin, the labeled fibroblasts were suspended in 1.5 mL of type I collagen solution containing 3 mg/mL collagen, and the cell concentration was 2×105 cells/mL.
The collagen solution containing labeled fibroblasts was placed in a cylindrical hole punched through a PDMS layer filling a petri dish. The dimension of the hole is 11 cm2×1 cm. The engineered tissue was generated when the fibroblasts-contained collagen solution polymerized at 37° C. for 1.5 hours. After being incubated with complete culture medium for 24 hours, as shown in
As shown in
The acquired sequential images were cross-correlated to estimate the local deformation rates throughout the tissue during the injection. Briefly, a pair of consecutive images was put into the DaVis software, and each of the images was divided into a grid of 32×32 pixels (1 pixel equals 4 μm) interrogation windows. The density of the fluorescence particle pairs was large enough to guarantee that there were typically more than 4 fluorescence particles in each interrogation window. The interrogation windows in the consecutive images were cross-correlated to generate correlation peaks, the location of which provided the deformation rate vector in the corresponding interrogation window. As shown in
Results and Discussion
A representative spatiotemporal deformation rate of the dermal equivalent is shown in
In the present study, we demonstrated the feasibility of measuring injection-induced deformation, which is expected to cause IPD using dermal equivalents and digital image correlation. Without being limited by any theory, the underlying rationale is that most nociceptors are present at the dermal layer, even though injection occurs at the SQ layer. The mechanical stress and fluid pressure stimulate nociceptors, which are primarily present at the dermis of the skin. However, we plan to further develop the ETCs by adding adipocytes, hyaluronic acids and fibronectins to create more realistic dermal and subcutaneous tissue models. The platform can also measure transport of biologic drugs at various injection conditions. Ultimately the platform will provide a reliable test bed to systematically design and optimize biologic drugs, their injection devices and schemes.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
9310302 | Garsha | Apr 2016 | B2 |
20130027539 | Kiyota | Jan 2013 | A1 |
20170138926 | Chubykin | May 2017 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
WO-2017039043 | Mar 2017 | WO |
WO-2018026172 | Feb 2018 | WO |
Entry |
---|
Gholobova et al., “Human tissue-engineered skeletal muscle: a novel 3D in vitro model for drug disposition and toxicity after intramuscular injection”, Aug. 2018, Scientific Reports, 8:12206 (Year: 2018). |
Koffler et al., “Improved vascular organization enhances functional integration of engineered skeletal muscle grafts”, 2011 PNAS, 108 (38), 14789-14794 (Year: 2011). |
Translation of WO2018026172A1, Cho, Dong-Woo, Feb. 8, 2018 (Year: 2018). |
Translation of WO2017039043A1, Jeon, Noo Li, Mar. 9, 2017 (Year: 2017). |
Jones. G. B., et al., Subcutaneous drug delivery: An evolving enterprise. Sci Transl Med. Aug. 30, 2017; 9(405). |
Sato. M., et al., FRI0174 Pain assessment for subcutaneous injection of biologics in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis. Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases 2013;72:A430-A431. |
Teo, K. et al., Spatiotemporal measurement of freezing-induced deformation of engineered tissues. Journal of biomechanical engineering, 132(3), 031003. |
Teo, K. et al., Effects of freezing-induced cell-fluid-matrix interactions on the cells and extracellular matrix of engineered tissues. Biomaterials, 32(23), 5380-5390. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20200253522 A1 | Aug 2020 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
62804637 | Feb 2019 | US |