The Asian Age

‘ Caffeine used to create novel gels for drug delivery’

-

Boston, April 16: Caffeine is well- known for its ability to help people stay alert, but scientists have now come up with a novel use for the stimulant — creating biocompati­ble gels for drug delivery and other medical applicatio­ns.

Researcher­s at Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology ( MIT) and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in the US loaded the gels with two antimalari­al drugs.

The material could also be used to carry other types of drugs, said former MIT postdoc Angela DiCiccio, lead author of the research paper published in the journal Biomateria­ls.

Drugs carried by this kind of material could be chewable or easier to swallow, the researcher­s said. “It is really appealing for patient population­s, especially children, who have difficulty with swallowing capsules and tablets,” said Giovanni Traverso, a research affiliate at MIT.

“Making polymer gels usually requires metal catalysts, which could be hazardous if any of the catalyst remains in the material after the gel is formed. The MIT team wanted to come up with a new way to make gels using catalysts and starting materials that are

Researcher­s at MIT and Brigham & Women’s Hospital used caffeine to create biocompati­ble gels for drug delivery and other medical applicatio­ns

based on food products and other materials that are safe to ingest. Making polymer gels usually requires metal catalysts, which could be hazardous if any of the catalyst remains in the material after the gel is formed.

“Our goal was to try to simplify the method of manufactur­ing and impart an improved safety profile from the beginning by using potentiall­y safer catalysts,” Traverso said.

It is also to be noted that although caffeine has not been used for chemical synthesis before, it drew the researcher­s’ attention because it is plantderiv­ed and can act as a weak base, meaning that it gently removes protons from other molecules.

It also has a similar structure to some other organic weak bases that have been used to catalyse the type of chemical reaction needed to form these gels - the formation of ester bonds to create a polyester.

The researcher­s decided to use caffeine to induce citric acid, another edible material produced by plants, to form a polymer network along with polyethyle­ne glycol ( PEG), a biocompati­ble polymer that has been used in drugs and consumer products such as toothpaste for many decades.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India