CA2606885C - Micro-pin for a drug-release system - Google Patents

Micro-pin for a drug-release system Download PDF

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Publication number
CA2606885C
CA2606885C CA002606885A CA2606885A CA2606885C CA 2606885 C CA2606885 C CA 2606885C CA 002606885 A CA002606885 A CA 002606885A CA 2606885 A CA2606885 A CA 2606885A CA 2606885 C CA2606885 C CA 2606885C
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Canada
Prior art keywords
micro
pins
active substance
reservoir
pin
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Expired - Fee Related
Application number
CA002606885A
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French (fr)
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CA2606885A1 (en
Inventor
Joachim Eicher
Bernd Zierenberg
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Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH
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Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH
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Priority claimed from DE19525607A external-priority patent/DE19525607A1/en
Application filed by Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH filed Critical Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH
Publication of CA2606885A1 publication Critical patent/CA2606885A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA2606885C publication Critical patent/CA2606885C/en
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Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

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Abstract

The invention provides a micro-pin for administering a drug solution from a reservoir of the drug solution, wherein the micropin is at least 10 µm long.

Description

MICRO-PIN FOR A DRUG-RELEASE SYSTEM

This is a divisional application of Canadian Patent Application No. 2,226,718, filed July 15, 1996.
The present invention relates to a new drug release system for the controlled release of drugs over a long period of time.

The subject matter of this divisional application is directed towards micro-pins for administering a drug solution from a reservoir of the drug solution.

The subject matter of the parent application was restricted to a transcorneal system for controlled release of an active substance from a reservoir of the substance.
However, it should be understood that the expression "the invention" and the like, when used herein, encompasses the subject matter of both the parent and this divisional application.
According to the invention, a transcorneal system for the controlled supply of drugs avoiding the gastrointestinal tract is claimed, which consists essentially of a device which makes it possible to administer a medicinal composition over a long period of time whilst avoiding the corneal skin layers.

According to one aspect of the invention of the parent application, there is provided a transcorneal system for the controlled release of an active substance, comprising an active substance reservoir, a device with micro-pins having capillary openings or micro-blades which are at least 10 pm long and are connected to the active substance reservoir via a liquid-conveying connection for actively transporting the active substance from the - la -reservoir through the micro-pins or along the micro-blades, a device for actively releasing the active substance from the reservoir through the micro-pins or along the micro-blades, wherein the device for actively releasing the active substance is an integrated pump with electronic actuating means.

According to one aspect of the invention of this divisional application, there is provided micro-pin for administering a drug solution from a reservoir of the drug solution, wherein the micro-pin is at least 10 pm long.

The apparatus according to the invention consists essentially of a reservoir for the drug and at least one - typically several - micro-pins provided with capillary openings which are connected to the reservoir in such a way that the drug in the form of a solution containing the active substance passes from the reservoir into the micro-pins. When the transcorneal system is placed on the skin, the Stratum corneum and possibly the epidermis are penetrated by the micro-pins so as to provide direct access to the innervated layer of the skin. In this way the drug can pass from the reservoir through the capillary openings of the micro-pins into vascularized sections of the skin from where it is absorbed into the bloodstream through the capillary circulatory system. Instead of the micro-pins, micro-blades may be used, which scratch the skin when the system is applied.

An essential advantage of the system according to the invention is that the skin barrier for transdermally administered drugs, namely the Stratum corneum, is circumvented with the system according to the invention.
It is precisely the individually different properties of the uppermost horny layer in patients which are the reason for problems such as insufficient bioavailability and allergies when active substances are administered transdermally. One particular advantage of transcorneal administration is that this method of administration is not restricted to those active substances which penetrate through the skin, as is the case with transdermal administration, for example. Examples of suitable active substances.include pain killers such as morphine, naltrexone, fentanyl, oxymorphone; anti-Parkinson's agents such as L-dopa, pramipexole; heart and circulatory drugs, nitroglycerin, drugs to combat high blood pressure and vasodilatory disorders, such as clonidine, nifidepine, verapamil and diltiazam; anti-coagulants such as heparin and hirudin; agents for long-term therapy in cancers and immune diseases; agents for the long-term treatment of addiction; peptides; ACE-inhibitors; neurokinin antagonists; and hormones such as oestradiol.

Usually, the active substance is present in the form of a solution to allow satisfactory travel through the capillary openings of the micro-pins of the transcorneal system. Theoretically, all physiologically acceptable solvents or solvent mixtures in which the active substance is soluble in a sufficient quantity may be used. The phrase "sufficient quantity" is taken to mean those concentrations of active substance in the solvent which make it possible to administer a therapeutically effective quantity of active substance.

The preferred solvents are water and ethanol. If it should be necessary, solubilisers and complexing agents may be used to increase the solubility of the active substance in the solvent. Delicate active substances may be mixed with additives to increase their shelf life.

The system according to the invention contains a reservoir for storing the active substance solution, whilst-a liquid-conveying connection between the reservoir and the micro-pins makes it possible for the drug to be conveyed from the reservoir through the capillary openings of the micro-pins and below the Stratum corneum, so that the drug can be introduced directly into the bloodstream whilst avoiding the outer horny layers.

The transportation of the drug - e.g. in the form of an aqueous solution - may be either "passive", i.e.
achieved by the existing concentration gradient between the concentration of the active substance solution in the reservoir and in the blood, or "active", e.g. by means of an overpressure stored in the reservoir, electrostatic or capillary forces, or a pump integrated in the system. Preferably, the solution of active substance is transported actively, e.g. by means of a pump or a piezoelectric membrane. The flow volume (ml/time) of the drug may be adjusted or monitored by means of one or more additional valves or a constriction between the reservoir and the micro-pins.

Depending on the size of the reservoir, the concentration of active substance and the therapeutic dose needed, the transcorneal system according to the invention is suitable for a period of administration of one or more days up to 4 weeks or longer, preferably 7 to 14 days.

In one embodiment, the system is so miniaturised in terms of its dimensions and weight, that it can readily be carried on the skin or fixed in the skin, like a plaster or a wristwatch, for a lengthy period. The transcorneal system may be secured by means of an armband, an adhesive tolerated by the skin or by the micro-pins themselves.

The manufacture of the system according to the invention and the filling of the reservoir are carried out under controlled conditions - for reasons of drug safety, the system according to the invention may be sealed or packed in airtight manner under sterile conditions until ready for use.

Usually, the reservoir and micro-pins of the system according to the invention form a one-part or multi-part constructional unit in a housing. However, embodiments are conceivable in which the reservoir and micro-pins are structurally separate from one another and joined together by a thin tube or capillary. This is particularly advantageous when large quantities of drug are to be administered over a lengthy period.

The technical and constructional design of the micro-pins and the capillary openings which serve to deliver the solution of active substance are of crucial importance to the functioning of the 'transcorneal system according to the invention.

In order to penetrate the Stratum eorneum, the micro-pins must have a length of at least 10 m, preferably 50 to 100 m more preferably up to 1 mm. The micro-pins according to the invention extend conically or cylindrically, the rounding radii of the tips of the pins typically being in the micron range, preferably smaller than 10 gm. This minimises the injury to the skin and the sensation of pain during administration.
In order to ensure an adequate delivery of the solution of active substance into the capillary circulation of the patient, the micro-pins according to the invention have capillary openings, e.g. in the form of bores or slots or a combination of both. Micro-pins consisting of a material having a defined porosity also enable the solution of active substance to be delivered.

Particular embodiments of the micro-pins according to the invention may, for example, have capillary openings in the form of a combination of a central bore with outward slots.

The transporting of the solution of active substance may be aided or regulated, depending on the viscosity of the solution, by mechanical, electrical, chemical and/or surfactant forces. For reasons of redundancy - but also in order to adjust the flow volume and the line resistance - it is preferable to use a plurality of micro-pins for each transcorneal system. Usually, the micro-pins are arranged on a surface which forms the side of the transcorneal system facing the skin. This surface may be between a few square millimetres and a few square centimetres. A typical number of micro-pins is between 10 and 100, although this number should not restrict the inventive concept in any way.

The active substance from which the micro-pins are produced must be tolerated by the skin and be biocompatible. In the interests of cheap mass production, as well as ceramic materials, glasses and metals such as titanium are suitable. Easily workable plastics are preferred. Biodegradable polymers such as polylactides and the like have the advantage that any particles of the pins remaining in the skin can be broken down. Biodegradable polymers have long been known in the art and have proved useful, for example, as suturing material and bone pins.

Figure 1 shows a particularly simple embodiment of the transcorneal system (20) in axial section. The system consists of a container (21) with micro-pins (23) formed on the base (22). The interior of the container acts as a reservoir (24) for receiving the solution of active substance (25). Depending on the viscosity, the solution of active substance is present as such directly in the reservoir or is stored in a matrix, e.g. of an absorbent material or a polymer.

The container and micro-pins have a fluidtight outer wall (26) which is mechanically strong enough to ensure that the system for activating the drug release can be placed on the skin and the micro-pins can be pressed into the skin using light pressure. Since the outer wall (26) is pierced in the region of the tips (27) of the micro-pins and forms an outlet opening (28), the solution of active substance is able to enter the capillary circulatory system by capillary force, thereby circumventing the transcorneal layer of skin, and from there it develops its systemic activity. In the region of the reservoir there may be a device (29) for providing a pressure equalising ventilation. Usually, the ventilation device is provided with a filter to ensure that no impurities can enter the system. In order to aid the flow of active substance solution, a device may be provided to exert additional pressure on the reservoir. The system is filled, for example, by injecting the solution of active substance into the reservoir, by immersing the system in a solution of active substance or by placing a matrix impregnated with the active substance in the system. It is obvious that in the latter case the transcorneal system is of two-part construction, e.g. it comprises a lower part which forms the micro-pins and an upper part with which the system is closed off once the active substance matrix has been put in. Depending on the type of active substance, this may be present in dissolved form in an aqueous or organic physiologically acceptable solvent or mixture of solvents. Examples of suitable solvents include water, ethanol, propanol and mixtures thereof.
However, the active substances may also be dissolved in a matrix consisting of a gel, e.g. a polymeric material.
Materials which may be used to produce the container and the micro-pins include primarily thermoplastic materials which may be sintered in a mould starting from fine granules. By a suitable choice of the parameters of pressure, temperature (typically and below the melting temperature of the material) and time, a reproducible porosity (typically 500) is achieved. By subsequently melting the surface of the component in a controlled manner it is sealed so as to produce a porous container with a leaktight outer wall. Areas of the wall which should be kept permeable, such as the ventilation devices and the tips of the pins, are kept below the melting temperature by cooling. In order to seal off the porous wall, it is also possible to use coatings and sealants, but these are technically more complex. The degree of porosity and the cross-sections of release at the tips of the pins are variable within wide limits and thus constitute parameters for adjusting the metering rate. Examples of other suitable materials include polyethylenes, polypropylenes or polysulphones.

A further developed system is shown in Figure 2. The transcorneal system (30) consists of a lower housing part (31a) and an upper housing part (31b). The lower housing part (31a) contains, on the side facing the surface of the skin, micro-pins (32) with the capillary openings (33), only three of which are shown in the drawings, albeit on a larger scale in the interests of clarity. The reservoir (34) for the solution of active substance is formed by a movable plunger (37) and at the sides of the lower part of the housing by a concertina seal (38). The concertina seal may, naturally, be replaced by other sealing provisions, e.g. by precision guiding of the plunger in the lower part of the housing.
The upper housing part contains the micropump (39) which exerts a defined pressure on the plunger and thereby administers the active substance through the micro-pins into the capillary circulatory system. On the inside of the lower housing part, microvalves (39a) may be provided in front of the capillary openings to prevent premature release of the drug. The pressure on the plunger may be exerted pneumatically by the pump, but in another embodiment it may be provided by means of a miniaturised electric motor and a transmission connected thereto, by a purely mechanical method.

In order to improve the controllability and adjustability of the metering of active substance, the system may be extended to include microsensors (39c), microactuators (39e), e.g. for actively controlling the microvalves (not shown), an electronic circuit (39b) with input/output possibilities (39d) and a current supply. The sensors serve primarily to detect and monitor controlled variables and disturbance variables, such as, for example, the concentration of active substance in the blood, the temperature or activity level of the patient, and to detect and monitor system variables such as time, throughflow, pressure and temperature. The memory area of the electronic circuit can be programmed with nominal data and parameters by the manufacturer or by the doctor or patient using a suitable interface. The measurements picked up by the sensors are detected by the electronics and further processed. The control signals for the microactuators are derived therefrom depending on the given control and regulating function.

An essential component of the transcorneal system according to the invention is the construction of the micro-pins.

Embodiments of pins (41) are shown in Figure 3. Figure 3a shows a pin (41) which is porous at the tip and is therefore made permeable for the solution of active substance. Figure 3b shows a pin (42) with a totally sealed outer wall. The tip has an extension (44) which breaks off at its root, the frangible point (43), when stuck in and thereby opens the previously sealed tip of the pin at the frangible point. Another possible method of opening the tips of the pins consists in covering the pin tips with a sealing film (45) which is torn away so as to "tear open" the pin tips (Fig. 3c). In order to anchor the transcorneal system, barbs may be formed on the pins, see Fig. 3d. The pins are basically made of a biologically acceptable material, e.g. a metal, ceramic or polymer, e.g. biodegradable polymers based on glycolide and/or lactide, preferably as a copolymer with other biodegradable polymers. The pins may be made from a porous material which is permeable to the active substance, e.g. a thermoplastic plastics material so that the active substance is released over the entire area of the pins.

Figure 4 shows a tank-shaped reservoir (50) in which the solution of active substance (51) is sealed off from the outside by means of an elastic membrane (54). Depending on the embodiment of the transcorneal system according to the invention, the reservoir and the micro-pins (53) penetrating into the skin form a constructional unit.
The reservoir wall (55) and the pins (53) are made of a porous material, as described above, the outer surface of which is sealed. The solution of active substance is injected into the active substance matrix (52) under slight overpressure. The overpressure is held by the elastic membrane (54) and thus helps to maintain a constant throughflow rate. The throughflow can also be briefly increased from the outside (by the patient) by pressing the membrane in order to achieve an additional dose. Figure 4a shows the system according to the invention in its initial state; the outwardly convex membrane (54) ensures that the solution of active substance is under pressure and it is forced into the reservoir of active substance (52). The active substance passes through the micro-pins (53) and through the transcorneal layer of the skin in order to achieve a systemic activity. Figure 4b shows the membrane (54) after the majority of the active substance solution has been used up.

Figure 5 shows a section through a transcorneal system (1). The housing (10) contains an active substance reservoir (2) which is sealed off at the top by a concertina (3). In the active substance reservoir is the active substance solution (4) which passes, at the bottom of the active substance reservoir, through an inlet channel (5) into a pump chamber (6). The solution runs through an outlet channel (7) to the micro-pins (8) arranged on the underside of the housing and from there through the capillary openings (9) of the micro-pins and out. The side parts (10a) of the housing and the underside (lOb) of the housing together with the micro-pins form a structural unit, preferably of a thermoplastic plastics material. The lid of the housing contains the energy supply in the form of a battery (11) as well as electronic controls (12), whilst a ventilator (13) enables the concertina to adapt to the reduced volume as the solution of active substance is delivered through the micro-pins. The active substance solution is conveyed by means of a piezoelectric membrane (14), which performs an electrically controlled pumping movement. The inlet channel (5) is constructed so that the solution of active substance is pumped by the piezoelectric member (14) to the outlets of the micro-pins. This is done either by means of a valve or by the fact that the cross-section of the inlet channel is smaller than that of the outlet channel (7). Before the transcorneal system is used, the micro-pins are protected by a pin protector (15), e.g. in the form of a cap.

Figure 6 shows some embodiments of the micro-pins according to the invention, in section and in plan view.

Figure 6a shows a micro-pin having a central opening (9) and cylindrical outer shape (8) and a conical tip (10).
Figure 6b shows a micro-pin having an opening in the form of a slot (9) and a cylindrical outer shape (8).
Figure 6c shows a micro-pin with flattened outer sides (8), the opening being provided in the form of a slot.
Figure 6d shows a micro-pin with cylindrical outer shape and an inclined tip (10).

Figure 6e shows an embodiment of the micro-blades according to the invention, which may be used instead of the micro-pins, in section and in plan view.

The openings (9) for the solution of active substance are usually close to the blade (8a) on the under side (lOb) of the reservoir (see Figure 5), so that the solution of active substance passes from there through the scratched surface of the skin and is able to develop its systemic activity.

Figure 6f shows an embodiment of a micro-blade in the form of a grain with short edges (8b) which scratch the skin. The opening or openings (9) is or are close to the grain.

The dimensions of the micro-blades are of approximately the same order of magnitude as the micro-pins described hereinbefore.

The individual micro-pins or micro-blades are typically arranged on the underside of the transcorneal system and form a structural unit; they may number between 10 and 100, for example.

The metering of the drug may be controlled by means of the flow volumes, which in turn depend on the total of the cross-sections of the openings in the micro-pins.

Claims (4)

CLAIMS:
1. A micro-pin for use in controlled release of an active substance from an active reservoir, - wherein the micro-pin is at least 10 µm long, and - wherein the active reservoir is connected to the micro-pin via a liquid conveying connection for active transportion of the active substance from the reservoir through the micro-pin, and - the reservoir has at least one moveable or flexible boundary.
2. The micro-pin according to claim 1, wherein - the moveable boundary surface is a piston within a cylinder.
3. The micro-pin according to claim 1, wherein - the flexible boundary surface is a membrane.
4. The micro-pin according to claim 1 or 3, wherein - the flexible boundary surface is a concertina.
CA002606885A 1995-07-14 1996-07-15 Micro-pin for a drug-release system Expired - Fee Related CA2606885C (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE19525607.7 1995-07-14
DE19525607A DE19525607A1 (en) 1995-07-14 1995-07-14 Transcorneal drug delivery system
CA002226718A CA2226718C (en) 1995-07-14 1996-07-15 Transcorneal drug-release system

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA002226718A Division CA2226718C (en) 1995-07-14 1996-07-15 Transcorneal drug-release system

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA2606885A1 CA2606885A1 (en) 1997-02-06
CA2606885C true CA2606885C (en) 2009-10-06

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CA002606885A Expired - Fee Related CA2606885C (en) 1995-07-14 1996-07-15 Micro-pin for a drug-release system

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CA2606885A1 (en) 1997-02-06

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