Antibiotic delivery system using bioactive bone cement consisting of Bis-GMA/TEGDMA resin and bioactive glass ceramics

Biomaterials
Makoto OtsukaT Kokubo

Abstract

A novel drug delivery system containing cephalexin (CEX) as a model drug using a new bioactive bone cement consisting of 15% bisphenol-alpha-glycidyl methacrylate (Bis-GMA), 15% triethylene-glycol dimethacrylate (TEGDMA) resin and 70% apatite- and wollastonite-containing glass-ceramic (A-W GC) powder was investigated. A-W GC powder containing CEX powder hardened within 5 min after mixing with Bis-GMA/TEGDMA resin, and furthermore its compressive strength was expected to be higher than that of polymethylmethacrylate cement. In vitro CEX release from bioactive bone cement pellets in a simulated body fluid at pH 7.25 and 37 degrees C continued for more than 2 weeks. The drug release rate increased with increasing amount of CEX in the mixture. All of the drug release profiles followed the Higuchi equation at the initial stage, but not at later stages. As hydroxyapatite was precipitated out on the cement surface, the drug release rate decreased. These results suggest that the CEX release rate from bioactive bone cement could be controlled by varying the amount of drug in the cement system.

Citations

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