Abstract

In recent times, 3D printing has been gaining traction as a fabrication platform for customizable drug dosages as a form of personalized medicine. While this has been recently demonstrated as oral dosages, there is potential to provide the same customizability and personalization as topical applications for wound healing. In this paper, the application of 3D printing to fabricate hydrogel wound dressings with customizable architectures and drug dosages was investigated. Chitosan methacrylate was synthesized and mixed with Lidocaine Hydrochloride and Levofloxacin respectively along with a photoinitiator before being used to print wound dressings of various designs. These designs were then investigated for their effect on drug release rates and profiles. Our results show the ability of 3D printing to customize drug dosages and drug release rates through co-loading different drugs at various positions and varying the thickness of drug-free layers over drug-loaded layers in the wound dressing respectively. Two scale-up approaches were also investigated for their effects on drug release rates from the wound dressing. The influence that each wound dressing design has on the release profile of drugs was also shown by fitting them with drug release kinetic models. This study thus shows the feasibility of utilizing 3D printing to fabricate wound dressings with customizable shapes, drug dosage and drug release rates that can be tuned according to the patient’s requirements.

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