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Home » This coin-sized insulin patch could improve diabetes treatment

This coin-sized insulin patch could improve diabetes treatment

March 6, 2020 By Chris Newmarker

Could treating diabetes someday be as simple as slapping on a patch? A UCLA-led research team thinks so, and it’s seeking FDA permission to prove it.

adhesive microneedle coin-sized insulin patch UCLA diabetes
Researchers were able to preload enough insulin into the coin-sized adhesive microneedle patches to enable clinical use. [Image courtesy of UCLA]
A research team led by UCLA bioengineering professor Zhen Gu claims to have overcome some of the technological hurdles around creating a patch that releases insulin based on the level of glucose in a person’s body.

Their creation is a coin-sized (about 5 cm2), adhesive polymer patch with microneedles. The pyramid-shaped microneedles are about 400 microns wide at the base and 900 microns tall and penetrate the stratum corneum, the outer layer of the skin. When the interstitial fluids in the skin reach hyperglycemic levels, the phenylboronic acid units within the polymer matrix promote swelling of needles and release the insulin preloaded into the matrix.

Because the researchers created the patch through a molding and UV light-curing process that doesn’t damage the insulin, about a fifth of the microneedles’ weight is insulin — enough to enable clinical use, according to the researchers’ paper in the Feb. 3 edition of the journal Nature Biomedical Engineering. Studies showed that the patches maintained the bioactivity of the insulin for more than 8 weeks at room temperature.

“There’s a high amount of insulin inside, and we’re making the whole needle matrix glucose-responsive,” Gu said in a recent interview with our sister site Medical Design & Outsourcing.

Get the full story on MDO. 

Filed Under: Diabetes, Drug-Device Combinations, Featured Tagged With: UCLA, Zenomics

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About Chris Newmarker

Chris Newmarker is the executive editor of WTWH Media life science's news websites and publications including MassDevice, Medical Design & Outsourcing and more. A professional journalist of 18 years, he is a veteran of UBM (now Informa) and The Associated Press whose career has taken him from Ohio to Virginia, New Jersey and, most recently, Minnesota. He’s covered a wide variety of subjects, but his focus over the past decade has been business and technology. He holds bachelor’s degrees in journalism and political science from Ohio State University. Connect with him on LinkedIn or email at [email protected].

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