Smart Drug Delivery Systems (SDDSs) are advanced platforms enabling controlled and stimuli-responsive drug release. Among external stimuli, near-infrared (NIR) light and magnetic fields are particularly attractive due to their non-invasive activation and tunable energy conversion. Multifunctional electrospun scaffolds (PCI) based on poly(butylene succinate) (PBS), ciprofloxacin (CPX), and iron oxide nanopowder (INPs, d < 50 nm) as a low-cost superparamagnetic component has been exhaustively explored, reporting the use of INP as photothermal agent in electrospun scaffolds, enabling high nanoparticle loading and NIR-triggered drug release, a strategy still scarcely explored in electrospun systems. This powder-based strategy simplifies formulation compared to stabilized SPION dispersions while preserving magnetic and photothermal functionalities. The resulting mats exhibited uniform, defect-free fibers with tunable mechanical properties and sustained CPX release (≈40% over 11 days), which increased to ≈60% under NIR irradiation. INPs imparted superparamagnetic behavior, NIR responsiveness, and MRI and X-ray detectability, while CPX improved fiber morphology and surface wettability. High cell viability (>85%) confirmed the cytocompatibility of the scaffolds. Comprehensive characterization included morphology, wettability, thermal and mechanical properties, NIR response, and drug release. Magnetic properties were evaluated using a cost-effective sensor-based approach (Hall sensors and fluxgate magnetometer), confirming superparamagnetic behavior. By coupling NIR-triggered drug release with MRI detectability, PCI scaffolds provide a compact theranostic platform for localized biomedical applications. Overall, PCI scaffolds represent a scalable and cost-effective multifunctional platform integrating controlled drug delivery, photothermal responsiveness, and imaging capability, showing strong potential for advanced biomedical applications.
Sciré, S., Derbel, A., Terracina, F., Craparo, E.F., Cicero, L., Cassata, G., et al. (2026). Novel nano-electrospuns with superparamagnetic and NIR photo-responsive behaviors as smart drug delivery systems and biomedical applications. JOURNAL OF DRUG DELIVERY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 120, 1-16 [10.1016/j.jddst.2026.108250].
Novel nano-electrospuns with superparamagnetic and NIR photo-responsive behaviors as smart drug delivery systems and biomedical applications
Sciré, Sergio;Terracina, Francesca;Craparo, Emanuela Fabiola;Licciardi, Mariano
2026-03-17
Abstract
Smart Drug Delivery Systems (SDDSs) are advanced platforms enabling controlled and stimuli-responsive drug release. Among external stimuli, near-infrared (NIR) light and magnetic fields are particularly attractive due to their non-invasive activation and tunable energy conversion. Multifunctional electrospun scaffolds (PCI) based on poly(butylene succinate) (PBS), ciprofloxacin (CPX), and iron oxide nanopowder (INPs, d < 50 nm) as a low-cost superparamagnetic component has been exhaustively explored, reporting the use of INP as photothermal agent in electrospun scaffolds, enabling high nanoparticle loading and NIR-triggered drug release, a strategy still scarcely explored in electrospun systems. This powder-based strategy simplifies formulation compared to stabilized SPION dispersions while preserving magnetic and photothermal functionalities. The resulting mats exhibited uniform, defect-free fibers with tunable mechanical properties and sustained CPX release (≈40% over 11 days), which increased to ≈60% under NIR irradiation. INPs imparted superparamagnetic behavior, NIR responsiveness, and MRI and X-ray detectability, while CPX improved fiber morphology and surface wettability. High cell viability (>85%) confirmed the cytocompatibility of the scaffolds. Comprehensive characterization included morphology, wettability, thermal and mechanical properties, NIR response, and drug release. Magnetic properties were evaluated using a cost-effective sensor-based approach (Hall sensors and fluxgate magnetometer), confirming superparamagnetic behavior. By coupling NIR-triggered drug release with MRI detectability, PCI scaffolds provide a compact theranostic platform for localized biomedical applications. Overall, PCI scaffolds represent a scalable and cost-effective multifunctional platform integrating controlled drug delivery, photothermal responsiveness, and imaging capability, showing strong potential for advanced biomedical applications.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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