Polymer, Vol.48, No.17, 5030-5041, 2007
Release characteristics of four model drugs from drug-loaded electrospun cellulose acetate fiber mats
Ultra-fine fiber mats of cellulose acetate (CA; M-w approximate to 30000 Da; degree of acetyl substitution approximate to 2.4) containing four different types of model drugs, i.e., naproxen (NAP), indomethacin (IND), ibuprofen (IBU), and sulfindac (SUL), were successfully prepared by electrospinning from 16% w/v CA solutions in 2:1 v/v acetone/N,N-dimethylacetamide (DMAc). The amount of the drugs in the solutions was fixed at 20 wt.% based on the weight of CA powder. The morphology of the drug-loaded electrospun (e-spun) CA fiber mats was smooth, with the average diameters of these fibers ranging between 263 and 297 nm. No presence of the drug aggregates of any kind was observed on the surfaces of these fibers, suggesting that the drugs were encapsulated well within the fibers. After submersion in the acetate buffer solution at 37 degrees C for 24 h, the drug-loaded e-spun CA fiber mats swelled particularly well (i.e., 570-630%), while the corresponding solvent-cast film counterparts did not. The release characteristics of the model drugs from both the drug-loaded CA fiber mats and the drug-loaded as-cast CA films were carried out by the total immersion method in the acetate buffer solution at 37 degrees C. At any given immersion time point, the release of the drugs from the drug-loaded e-spun CA fiber mats was greater than that from the corresponding as-cast films. The maximum release of the drugs from both the drug-loaded fiber mats and films could be ranked as follows: NAP > IBU > IND > SUL. (c) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.