One-step synthesis of biodegradable curcumin-derived hydrogels as potential soft tissue fillers after breast cancer surgery

Nava Shpaisman, Larisa Sheihet, Jared Bushman, James Winters, Joachim Kohn

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

54 Scopus citations

Abstract

A one-step synthesis of a curcumin-derived hydrogel (curcumin content of 25-75 mol %) is reported. Curcumin is incorporated into the hydrogel backbone and cross-linked through biodegradable carbonate linkages. Curcumin as a part of the polymer backbone is protected from oxidation and degradation, while hydrogel hydrolysis results in the release of active curcumin. Nontoxic poly(ethylene glycol) and desaminotyrosyl-tyrosine ethyl ester are used to tune the hydrophilic/hydrophobic hydrogel properties. In this way, hydrogels with a wide range of physical properties including water-uptake (100-550%) and compression moduli (7-100 kPa) were obtained. Curcumin release is swelling-controlled and could be extended to 80 days. In vitro, curcumin-derived hydrogels showed selective cytotoxicity against MDA-MB-231 (IC50 9 μM) breast cancer cells but no cytotoxicity to noncancerous quiescent human dermal fibroblasts even at high curcumin concentrations (160 μM). One possible application of these curcumin-derived hydrogels is as soft tissue filler after surgical removal of cancerous tissue.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2279-2286
Number of pages8
JournalBiomacromolecules
Volume13
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - 13 Aug 2012
Externally publishedYes

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