Characterisation and toxicological evaluation of hydrogel-type polymeric biomatrials pre-and poststerilisation with a novel pulsed plasma gas-discharge system.
Abstract
This study investigated the in vitro biocompatibility and important physicochemical
properties of unique N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone–acrylic acid based copolymer hydrogels
intended for use in biomedical applications. Moreover, the suitability of a novel pulsed
plasma gas-discharge (PPGD) technology for the nonthermal sterilisation of such hydrogels
was also evaluated. Physical hydrogels were synthesised using varying monomer
concentrations in conjunction with UV340nm photopolymerisation and the photoinitiator
Irgacure® 184. In addition, covalently crosslinked chemical hydrogels were prepared by
supplementing the polymerisation reaction with ethylene glycol dimethacrylate based
crosslinking agents. The hydrogels were analysed and characterised using a variety of
appropriate analytical and mechanical testing techniques.
Initial swelling and degradation studies revealed that the physical hydrogels
dissolved after a short swelling period. Further analytical testing showed that considerable
amounts of residual monomeric material still remained in the gels post-polymerisation.
Subsequently, in vitro biocompatibility testing was performed to determine the cytotoxic
and genotoxic potential of the hydrogels following direct and indirect contact with human
hepatoma (HepG2) and human ileocecal adenocarcinoma (HCT-8) cells, chosen as model
cell lines. More specifically, dissolved physical hydrogels were tested in appropriate
cytotoxicity assays using MTT and neutral red endpoints. The presence of unreacted
components in the physical networks induced severe cytotoxicity following direct cellular
exposure to concentrations above 1.25 mg/ml of hydrogel solutions in cell culture medium.
In addition, the cell morphology was adversely affected. Similar results were observed
following cellular exposure to solid hydrogel discs in the indirect contact (agarose overlay)
assay. In the alkaline comet assay the highest tested concentration of physical hydrogels
(2.5 mg/ml) resulted in a slight but significant increase in DNA migration. However, this
effect was believed to be exerted by the hydrogels’ cytotoxic potential rather than through
an active genotoxic mechanism. Investigations carried out at the nucleotide level using the
Ames assay provided no evidence of mutagenic activity associated with the physical
hydrogels.
Chemical hydrogels were shown to be water insoluble and their swelling capacity
permitted the retention of high amounts of aqueous solution (over 20-35 times their own
weight depending on the monomeric composition), yet still maintaining structural integrity.
Chemical analysis suggested that the unreacted monomeric base material was efficiently
removed post-polymerisation by applying an additional purification process. An
investigation into the gels’ mechanical properties revealed that they may find use in wound
healing applications. Promising biocompatibility data was obtained during direct and
indirect contact exposure of the purified polymers to human keratinocytes (HaCaT) and
HepG2 cells. No indication of significant cell death was observed using MTT, neutral red
and fluorescence-based toxicity endpoint indicators. In addition, the alkaline comet assay
and the Ames assay showed no genotoxic effects following cell exposure to hydrogel
extracts. Findings from this study demonstrated that these chemical hydrogels are noncytoand
nongenotoxic and further work should be carried out to investigate their potential as a
wound healing device.
Seminal investigations were carried out on the development and subsequent
optimisation of the prototype PPGD system for the novel decontamination of hydrogels
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under varying operating conditions. Significant calibration and modification of this PPGD
system were undertaken in order to apply this emerging technology for hydrogel
sterilisation. After considerable and intensive investigations it was discovered that using
O2- and N2-mediated discharges produced significant antimicrobial activities in test media
at varying applied voltages. When artificially inoculated with a high microbial cell density
(reaching 4.6 cfu/cm2 of either Escherichia coli or Staphylococcus aureus), PPGD
effectively decontaminated the chemical hydrogels within 16 minutes of exposure at 16
kV. Preliminary material characterisation suggested that the treatment had no adverse
impact on the functional material properties. However, studies into the toxicological safety
showed that reactive chemical species and/or electrode degradation products can adversely
influence the biocompatibility of treated hydrogels if operated for 30 min at 16 kV.
Although no genotoxic effects were observed, cytotoxic changes were introduced during
prolonged PPGD treatment regimes (at 30 min exposures) that were aimed at extreme
microbial contamination conditions. The negative impact on the hydrogels biocompatibility
was reduced by simply preincubating the hydrogels for 7 days prior to testing thus allowing
reactive species to dissipate.
This multidisciplinary project constitutes the first study to report on the
development of novel pulsed power electrotechnologies for the nonthermal
decontamination of important hydrogels. Specifically, development of PPGD as an
alternative or complementary approach to hydrogel sterilisation will increase the available
methods of effective decontamination. Development of this PPGD is both pressing and
timely as it also coincides with a marked reduction in the amount and intensity of existing
decontamination approaches that are effective, as attested by the commensurate rise in
unwanted community and healthcare related infections. Findings from this project have
also been presented at leading international conferences and published in leading journals
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