Micro Injection Molding of Drug-Loaded Round Window Niche Implants for an Animal Model Using 3D-Printed Molds

Pharmaceutics. 2023 May 24;15(6):1584. doi: 10.3390/pharmaceutics15061584.

Abstract

A novel approach for the long-term medical treatment of the inner ear is the diffusion of drugs through the round window membrane from a patient-individualized, drug-eluting implant, which is inserted in the middle ear. In this study, drug-loaded (10 wt% Dexamethasone) guinea pig round window niche implants (GP-RNIs, ~1.30 mm × 0.95 mm × 0.60 mm) were manufactured with high precision via micro injection molding (µIM, Tmold = 160 °C, crosslinking time of 120 s). Each implant has a handle (~3.00 mm × 1.00 mm × 0.30 mm) that can be used to hold the implant. A medical-grade silicone elastomer was used as implant material. Molds for µIM were 3D printed from a commercially available resin (TG = 84 °C) via a high-resolution DLP process (xy resolution of 32 µm, z resolution of 10 µm, 3D printing time of about 6 h). Drug release, biocompatibility, and bioefficacy of the GP-RNIs were investigated in vitro. GP-RNIs could be successfully produced. The wear of the molds due to thermal stress was observed. However, the molds are suitable for single use in the µIM process. About 10% of the drug load (8.2 ± 0.6 µg) was released after 6 weeks (medium: isotonic saline). The implants showed high biocompatibility over 28 days (lowest cell viability ~80%). Moreover, we found anti-inflammatory effects over 28 days in a TNF-α-reduction test. These results are promising for the development of long-term drug-releasing implants for human inner ear therapy.

Keywords: 3D printing; TNF-α; anti-inflammatory; biocompatibility; dexamethasone; digital light processing; drug delivery system; implant; inner ear therapy; micro injection molding; rapid tooling.

Grants and funding

The authors would like to thank the Federal Ministry of Education and Research of Germany (BMBF) for research funding of “RESPONSE—Partnership for Innovation in Implant Technology” (funding numbers 03ZZ0928A, 03ZZ0928D, 03ZZ0928J and 03ZZ0928L) in the program “Twenty20—Partnership for Innovation”. In addition, we want to thank the BMBF for funding of the DLP 3D printing device Asiga Pro 4K45 (funding number 03ZZ09X06).