2023 journal article

Low-dose intrapulmonary drug delivery device for studies on next-generation therapeutics in mice

Journal of Controlled Release, 359, 287–301.

By: A. Gracioso Martins n, D. Snider n, K. Popowski n, K. Schuchard n, M. Tenorio n, S. Akunuri n, J. Wee n, K. Peters n ...

Contributors: A. Gracioso Martins n, D. Snider n, K. Popowski n, K. Schuchard n, M. Tenorio n, S. Akunuri n, J. Wee n, K. Peters n ...

TL;DR: A tunable nebulized system composed of an ultrasonic transducer equipped with a mesh nebulizer fitted with a silicone restrictor plate modification to control the nebulization rate provides targeted lung delivery efficiency far exceeding conventional nebulizers preventing waste of expensive biologics and large molecules during proof-of-concept and pre-clinical experiments involving mice. (via Semantic Scholar)
Source: ORCID
Added: March 8, 2024

Although nebulizers have been developed for delivery of small molecules in human patients, no tunable device has been purpose-built for targeted delivery of modern large molecule and temperature-sensitive therapeutics to mice. Mice are used most of all species in biomedical research and have the highest number of induced models for human-relevant diseases and transgene models. Regulatory approval of large molecule therapeutics, including antibody therapies and modified RNA highlight the need for quantifiable dose delivery in mice to model human delivery, proof-of-concept studies, efficacy, and dose-response. To this end, we developed and characterized a tunable nebulization system composed of an ultrasonic transducer equipped with a mesh nebulizer fitted with a silicone restrictor plate modification to control the nebulization rate. We have identified the elements of design that influence the most critical factors to targeted delivery to the deep lungs of BALB/c mice. By comparing an in silico model of the mouse lung with experimental data, we were able to optimize and confirm the targeted delivery of over 99% of the initial volume to the deep portions of the mouse lung. The resulting nebulizer system provides targeted lung delivery efficiency far exceeding conventional nebulizers preventing waste of expensive biologics and large molecules during proof-of-concept and pre-clinical experiments involving mice. (Word Count =207).