To test the capsule’s
«We want to make it as easy as possible for people to take their medications over a sustained period of time. When patients have to remember to take a drug everyday or multiple times a day, we start to see less and less adherence to the regimen. Being able to swallow a capsule once a week or once a month could change the way we think about delivering medications," said
Medication
«In addition to improving adherence, our ultra
The research team developed a capsule that is about the size of a fish oil capsule when swallowed. Once inside the stomach, the capsule unfolds into a
«The gastrointestinal tract is a strong, durable passage way through the body. We designed the capsule to pause its transit in the stomach to allow for more controlled drug delivery and absorption, before passing through the GI tract without any harm," said Traverso. «Some of the challenges we face in getting the capsule in place are the ‘ship in the bottle problem’ — in this case, the neck of the bottle is the esophagus — and preventing the capsule from passing through the rest of the tube. The pylorus is about 2 centimeters in diameter so we designed our system to be 4 centimeters when it opens.»
The capsule contains polymers and other materials mixed with ivermectin to allow the drug to slowly diffuse out of the material over time. The team reports evidence of diffusion for up to two weeks, and is interested in continuing to develop the system so that it can provide the drug for one month or longer.
Ivermectin is currently used to combat several kinds of parasites, including the parasitic worms that causes river blindness and lymphatic filariasis. (The researchers who discovered ivermectin were awarded the Nobel prize in 2015.) Ivermectin has also been shown to reduce malaria transmission as the drug is toxic to the mosquito species that spread malaria (Anopheles). The concentrations of ivermectin in the blood of humans taking the drug are high enough to kill mosquitoes that bite them.
In collaboration with research teams at Imperial College London and the Institute of Disease Modeling in Seattle, the team applied mathematical modeling of malaria transmission and found that
In addition, they envision potential applications beyond infectious disease, including chronic diseases such as psychiatric disease, heart disease, renal disease and more. They plan to investigate the system’s applications for these conditions as well.
This work was funded, in part, by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, the Alexander von