Transdermal Delivery of Luteinizing Hormone-releasing Hormone with Chitosan Microneedles: A promising tool for androgen deprivation therapy

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Abstract

Long-term administration of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone analogs (LHRHa) is the main type of androgen-deprivation therapy (ADT) for lethal prostate cancer. A fully insertable microneedle system, composed of embeddable chitosan microneedles and a dissolvable polyvinyl alcohol/polyvinyl pyrrolidone supporting array, was developed for sustained delivery of LHRHa to the skin. A porcine cadaver skin test showed that chitosan microneedles can be fully embedded within the skin and microneedle-created micropores reseal within 7 days. The measured LHRHa loading amount was 73.3±2.8 μg per microneedle patch. After applying goserelin-containing microneedles to mice, serum LH levels increased initially and then declined below baseline at day 7. In contrast, serum testosterone levels increased to reach a peak at day 14 and then declined to a castration level at day 21. Additionally, such a castration level was maintained for 2 weeks. Therefore, transdermal delivery of goserelin with embeddable chitosan microneedles can produce a castrated state in mice. Such a system is a promising, feasible means of delivering ADT.

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Chen, M. Y., Chen, Y. Y., Tsai, H. T., Tzai, T. S., Chen, M. C., & Tsai, Y. S. (2017). Transdermal Delivery of Luteinizing Hormone-releasing Hormone with Chitosan Microneedles: A promising tool for androgen deprivation therapy. Anticancer Research, 37(12), 6791–6797. https://doi.org/10.21873/anticanres.12139

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