Abstract

ABSTRACTThe effective and locally sustained delivery of hydrophobic drug with hydrogels as carriers is still a challenge owing to the inherent incompatibility of hydrophilic hydrogel network and hydrophobic drug. One promising approach is to use porous hydrogels to encapsulate and deliver hydrophobic drug in the form of nanoparticles to the disease sites. However, this approach is currently limited by the inability to load concentrated hydrophobic drug nanoparticles into the hydrogels because of the severe nanoparticle aggregation during the loading process. In this article, we firstly designed and fabricated efficient drug nanoparticles embedded hydrogels for hydrophobic drug delivery by incorporating monodisperse silybin (hydrophobic drug for liver protection) nanoparticles into acrylated hyaluronic acid (HA‐AC) based hydrogels through in situ cross‐linking. The silybin nanoparticles embedded hydrogel scaffolds proved to be a good sustained release system with a long period of 36 h. The drug release from this hybrid hydrogels could be modulated by tuning HA‐AC concentration, cross‐linking ratio, chain length of cross‐linker and drug loading amount. The different kinetic models were applied, and it was observed that the release profile of silybin best followed the Hixson‐Crowell model for the release of drug from the hydrogels embedding silybin nanoparticles. It could be envisioned that this process would significantly advance the potential applications of hydrogel scaffolds mediated hydrophobic drug delivery in clinical therapies. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J. Appl. Polym. Sci. 2016, 133, 43111.

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