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Poly(lactic acid), Poly(glycolic acid), and their copolymer, PLGA

Poly(lactic acid), Poly(glycolic acid), and their copolymer, PLGA. April 21, 2008. Why PLA, PGA, and PLGA?. Biodegradable Derived from renewable resources Applications -Surgical sutures -Drug Delivery Systems -Internal Fixation Devices -Tissue Engineering Scaffolds.

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Poly(lactic acid), Poly(glycolic acid), and their copolymer, PLGA

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  1. Poly(lactic acid), Poly(glycolic acid), and their copolymer, PLGA April 21, 2008

  2. Why PLA, PGA, and PLGA? • Biodegradable • Derived from renewable resources • Applications • -Surgical sutures • -Drug Delivery Systems • -Internal Fixation Devices • -Tissue Engineering Scaffolds

  3. Poly(lactic acid) (PLA) • Start with anhydride (lactide) • Ring-Opening Polymerization • tin (II) chloride or stannous octoate

  4. Poly(glycolic acid) (PGA) • Start with anhydride (glycolide) • Ring-Opening Polymerization K11

  5. Poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) • Start with anhydrides (lactide and glycolide) • Ring-Opening Polymerization

  6. Processing and Cost • Similar processing for PLA, PGA, and PLGA • Melt spinning • PGA more difficult that PLA and PLGA • Tm PGA = 220° C • Cost • PLA - $1.30 / lb. • PGA > PGLA > PLA

  7. Properties • PLA • Tg≈ 65° C • Tm≈ 175° C • PGA • Tg≈ 37° C • Tm≈ 230° C • Higher strength and modulus • PLGA • Vary with % composition

  8. PLA and PGA Degradation • Hydrolysis + H2O Polylactic acid Lactic acid + H2O Glycolic acid Polyglycolic acid

  9. Surface Degradation Surface Degradation • Fluid is not absorbed by material • Only the surface is degraded Fluid Material

  10. Surface Degradation Surface Degradation • Fluid is not absorbed by material • Only the surface is degraded Fluid Material

  11. Surface Degradation Surface Degradation • Fluid is not absorbed by material • Only the surface is degraded Fluid Material

  12. Surface Degradation Surface Degradation • Fluid is not absorbed by material • Only the surface is degraded Fluid Material

  13. Bulk Degradation • Fluid is absorbed by material • Entirety of the material is degraded Fluid Material

  14. Bulk Degradation Bulk Degradation • Fluid is absorbed by material • Entirety of the material is degraded Fluid Material

  15. Bulk Degradation Bulk Degradation • Fluid is absorbed by material • Entirety of the material is degraded Fluid Material

  16. Bulk Degradation Bulk Degradation • Fluid is absorbed by material • Entirety of the material is degraded Fluid Material

  17. Bulk Degradation Bulk Degradation • Fluid is absorbed by material • Entirety of the material is degraded Fluid Material

  18. Molecular Weights Molecular Weights • Surface Degradation • Bulk Degradation

  19. Molecular Weights Molecular Weights • Surface Degradation • Bulk Degradation

  20. Molecular Weights Molecular Weights • Surface Degradation • Bulk Degradation

  21. Degradation Weights Degradation Rates • Dependent on crystallinity • PLA degrades faster due to lower crystallinity • Co-polymerization greatly increases rate

  22. Biological Factors Biological Factors • Implantations face immune response • Macrophages use acids, hydroxyls, peroxides, alcohols to degrade materials • More corrosive than water

  23. PLGA Applications PLGA Applications • PLGA degraded via hydrolysis at ester bonds • Degradation rate depends on co-polymer ratio of lactide and glycolide composition • Lactic acid is hydrophobic – degrades slower than glycolic acid PLGA chemical structure where X= lactide ratio, Y=glycolide ratio • Synthetic biodegradable polymers have higher mechanical, biocompatible, biodegradable properties than natural polymers (ie – collagen)

  24. PLGA Applications PLGA Applications • Faster hydrolytic and degradation processes if glycolide ratio greater than lactide (except 50:50) • Hydrolytic mechanism ideal for drug release • Manipulate co-polymer ratio to vary drug release rates • Environmentally friendly: PLGA enters carboxylic acid cycle; CO2& H2O by-products

  25. PLGA Applications: Vaccines PLGA Applications: Vaccines • PLGA microspheres more efficient than protein/peptide delivery methods • Daily intravenous injections of protein/peptide drugs have short half lives in vivo • Drug encapsulated in PLGA to control drug release by modifying hydrophilicity properties • Increases patient compliance and minimizes number of injections

  26. PLGA Applications: Tissue Engineering PLGA Applications: Tissue Engineering • Bone regeneration via porous PLGA scaffold • Pore size, shape, and interconnectivity in PLGA scaffold for cellular growth and tissue regeneration • Integrity of scaffold manipulated by co-polymer ratio • 85:15 PLGA ideal – minimal degradation within body to support bone growth

  27. Biological Factors PLGA Applications: Drug-Eluting Stent • Restenosis: re-occlusion of coronary vessel • Fully biodegradable stent provides higher drug loadings that reduce hyperplasia in artery • Drug simultaneously released into tissue as PLGA layer degrades • Layer thickness relates to MW – lower MW degrades faster than heavier polymer Fully biodegradable multilayer PLGA stent has more efficient drug release control Quick degradation rate Drug containing layer: glycolide easily degraded for efficient drug elution Support layer: slow hydrolytic processes

  28. Questions

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