Abstract

The objective of this work was to delineate the effect of hydrophilic and hydrophobic polymeric additives on sol-gel transition and release profile of timolol maleate (TM) from poly (ethylene glycol)-poly (ε-caprolactone)- poly (ethylene glycol) (PEG-PCL-PEG)-based thermosensitive hydrogel. Polycaprolactone (hydrophobic additive) and polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) (hydrophilic additive) reduced critical gel concentration of PEG-PCL-PEG triblock polymer. The effect of PCL on sol-gel transition was more pronounced than PVA. However, with PCL no statistically significant difference in release profile was observed. The effect of PVA on release profile was more pronounced, which reduced the cumulative percentage release of TM from 86.4±0.8% to 73.7±1.8% over 316 h. Moreover, cytotoxicity of the hydrogel was also investigated utilizing rabbit primary corneal epithelial culture cells. No significant cytotoxicity of hydrogel alone or in presence of additives was observed. So, polymeric additive strategy serves as a valuable tool for optimizing TM release kinetics from PEG-PCL-PEG hydrogel matrix.

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