Abstract

Ocular drug delivery using contact lenses may be able to substitute for eye drop therapy. However, issues with hydrophobic drugs (like bimatoprost that is used to treat glaucoma) such as low drug uptake using a simple soaking method into preformed contact lenses and alteration in the swelling and transmittance of lenses restricts the application for drug delivery. This research uses graphene oxide (GO) to control the release of bimatoprost from contact lenses along with improvements in the drug uptake, and lens swelling and transmittance. GO was loaded into silicone hydrogel contact lenses by adding the GO at the same time as lenses were polymerized. These lenses were soaked in bimatoprost. Alternatively contact lenses, either with or without GO, were produced by adding bimatoprost during lens polymerization. GO improved contact lens swelling due to its water binding capacity and lens transmittance due to the molecular dispersion of bimatoprost on the surface of the GO which prevented the local precipitation of the drug. The bimatoprost uptake was not improved in the presence of GO. However, its in vitro release profile was improved. Adding bimatoprost and GO at the same time as lenses were polymerized (DL-GO-BMT) significantly decreased the loss of drug during extraction and sterilization in comparison to contact lenses (DL-BMT) without GO. As the amount of GO was increased, the DL-GO-BMT lenses showed a significant decrease in the burst and cumulative release of bimatoprost. Ocular irritation and histopathology reports demonstrated the safety of GO contact lens. The in vivo pharmacokinetic studies in the rabbit tear fluid showed significant improvement in mean residence time (MRT) and area under the curve (AUC) with DL-GO-0.2 μg-BMT-100 contact lens in comparison to eye drop solution. The study demonstrated that the addition of GO to contact lenses can control the release of bimatoprost as well as improved the lens swelling and transmittance. However, further optimization is needed to modulate the release of drug within the therapeutic level to manage glaucoma.

Full Text
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