TY - JOUR
T1 - Experimental and computational analysis of the injection-induced mechanical changes in the skin microenvironment during subcutaneous injection of biologics
AU - Shen, Yingnan
AU - Shah, Sameep Rajubhai
AU - Zhao, Kejie
AU - Han, Bumsoo
N1 - This study was partially supported by a grant from National Science Foundation ( MCB-2134603 ), the Purdue University Institute for Cancer Research ( P30 CA023168 ), and a Program Grant from Purdue Institute for Drug Discovery .
PY - 2023/6
Y1 - 2023/6
N2 - Subcutaneous (SQ) injection is an effective delivery route for various biologics, including proteins, antibodies, and vaccines. However, pain and discomfort induced during SQ injection pose a notable challenge for the broader and routine use of biologics. Understanding the underlying mechanism and quantification of injection-induced pain and discomfort (IPD) are urgently needed. A crucial knowledge gap is what changes in the skin tissue microenvironment are induced by the SQ injection, which may ultimately cause the IPD. In this study, thus, a hypothesis is postulated that the injection of biologics solution through the skin tissue microenvironment induces spatiotemporal mechanical changes. Specifically, the injection leads to tissue swelling and subsequent increases in the interstitial fluid pressure (IFP) and matrix stress around the injection site, which ultimately causes the IPD. To test this hypothesis, an engineered SQ injection model is developed capable of measuring tissue swelling during SQ injection. The injection model consists of a skin equivalent with quantum dot-labeled fibroblasts, which enables the measurement of injection-induced spatiotemporal deformation. The IFP and matrix stress are further estimated by computational analysis approximating the skin equivalent as a nonlinear poroelastic material. The result confirms significant injection-induced tissue swelling and increases in IFP and matrix stress. The extent of deformation is correlated to the injection rate. The results also suggest that the size of biologics particulates significantly affects the pattern and extent of the deformation. The results are further discussed to propose a quantitative understanding of the injection-induced changes in the skin microenvironment.
AB - Subcutaneous (SQ) injection is an effective delivery route for various biologics, including proteins, antibodies, and vaccines. However, pain and discomfort induced during SQ injection pose a notable challenge for the broader and routine use of biologics. Understanding the underlying mechanism and quantification of injection-induced pain and discomfort (IPD) are urgently needed. A crucial knowledge gap is what changes in the skin tissue microenvironment are induced by the SQ injection, which may ultimately cause the IPD. In this study, thus, a hypothesis is postulated that the injection of biologics solution through the skin tissue microenvironment induces spatiotemporal mechanical changes. Specifically, the injection leads to tissue swelling and subsequent increases in the interstitial fluid pressure (IFP) and matrix stress around the injection site, which ultimately causes the IPD. To test this hypothesis, an engineered SQ injection model is developed capable of measuring tissue swelling during SQ injection. The injection model consists of a skin equivalent with quantum dot-labeled fibroblasts, which enables the measurement of injection-induced spatiotemporal deformation. The IFP and matrix stress are further estimated by computational analysis approximating the skin equivalent as a nonlinear poroelastic material. The result confirms significant injection-induced tissue swelling and increases in IFP and matrix stress. The extent of deformation is correlated to the injection rate. The results also suggest that the size of biologics particulates significantly affects the pattern and extent of the deformation. The results are further discussed to propose a quantitative understanding of the injection-induced changes in the skin microenvironment.
KW - Engineered subcutaneous injection model
KW - Injection-induced pain
KW - Interstitial fluid pressure
KW - Matrix stress
KW - Poroelastic analysis
KW - Tissue swelling
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U2 - 10.1016/j.eml.2023.102025
DO - 10.1016/j.eml.2023.102025
M3 - Article
C2 - 37304308
AN - SCOPUS:85158047689
SN - 2352-4316
VL - 61
JO - Extreme Mechanics Letters
JF - Extreme Mechanics Letters
M1 - 102025
ER -