The Drug Delivery Group undetakes research and development in pharmaceutical technology and applies scientific principles both in the formulation of medicines and in the development and use of predictive models of drug absorption. This involves not only some of the more challenging conventional drug molecules but also the products of biotechnology. The ability of a formulation to influence the site and duration of drug action and affect therapeutic success is the major theme and results in a multifaceted research programme.
Collaborative research
Research is conducted in a vibrant environment through close associations with other research groups within King\'s College London and numerous active collaborations with universities, institutes and companies across the world. The Drug Delivery Group has excellent facilities for dosage form characterisation, laboratory scale formulation of dosage forms, and in vitro and in vivo evaluation of biopharmaceutical properties of drugs and medicines. Research on the development of medicines has an emphasis on the respiratory, topical and oral routes of drug delivery.
Respiratory drug delivery
Respiratory delivery is a major focus for the group and provides an excellent example of the collaborative nature of the group\'s research in that all members have expertise that contributes to inhaled drug delivery research. This expertise is focused on developing novel strategies for drug delivery by inhalation and the treatment of respiratory disease. Projects extend from the science of aerosol formulations from dry powder and pressurised inhaler devices to the biopharmaceutics of particle-cell interaction, including gene therapy, and the characterisation of bacteria in lung diseases such as cystic fibrosis.
Notably, researchers from the Drug Delivery Group have collaborated with partners from all major pharmaceutical companies involved in the development of inhaled products to form the Drugs in the Lungs Consortium, an open innovation partnership that focuses on addressing major gaps in scientific knowledge of the fate of inhaled pharmaceuticals. The aim is to enhance inhaled product development through pre-competitive scientific collaboration in the areas of inhaled drug dosimetry, disposition, toxicity and pharmacokinetics.
Topical and oral drug delivery
Topical delivery is another area of strength and the group has state-of-the-art facilities to design, formulate and evaluate topical preparations. These are screened in vitro using human skin diffusion models and in vivo using healthy volunteers. A number of novel devices, formulations and analytical techniques have been developed within the group and are being evaluated for commercial potential. Research into oral delivery falls into two main categories: (i) the interaction between gastrointestinal factors with lipid formulations in the intestine, and (ii) novel formulations for the delivery of drugs to the colon.
Nanomedicines for drug delivery
The manufacture, characterisation and evalution of nanomedicines for both drug delivery and diagnostic purposes is a third major research theme within the Drug Delivery Group. Projects range from the evaluation of carbon nanotubes as drug carriers and imaging agents and the investigation of new polymeric materials for nanomedicine development through to the evaluation of nanomedicine safety and efficacy. Nanomedicine research within the Drug Delivery Group is highly interdisciplinary where strong collaborations both with other research divisions within King\'s College London are vital, as well as numerous national and international partnerships.
Materials science
The stability and phase behaviour of drugs and dosage forms are analysed using pharmaceutical thermal techniques, in particular to predict the physical stability of medicines and the compatibility of excipients with freeze and spray drying processes.
Research is focused on the development and biopharmaceutical application of respiratory and intestinal epithelial cell culture models. Drug permeability, metabolism and gene delivery are studied:
Research is focused on the development and biopharmaceutical application of respiratory and intestinal epithelial cell culture models. Drug permeability, metabolism and gene delivery are studied: enhancement of drug transport presystemic drug metabolism epithelial pathology / toxicity
Inhaled Drug Delivery
"Inhalation biopharmaceutics" encompasses anything that may affect the rate or extent of drug absorption from the lung. Research projects in this emerging field include:
Dissolution in lung fluid Mucociliary and macrophage interactions Drug metabolism Epithelial permeability Toxicity of delivery vehicles (excipients, nanoparticles)
All these events occur at (or in) the respiratory epithelium.
Oral Drug Delivery
Current projects investigate interactions between intestinal fluid, the intestinal epithelium, orally administered drugs and formulation excipients.
Clinical Pharmaceutics
Projects with innovation aimed at improving practice in the manufacturing of pharmaceutical products.
Much of the research within the Drug Delivery group is focused on the analysis of human-associated microbes. The aim of this work is to better characterise these microbes in both health and disease.
The human lung and gut have been areas of particular importance. Most of work to date has focused on infections of the lungs of cystic fibrosis (CF) patients. It is particularly important to understand these infections given the mortality associated with respiratory failure within this patient group. Work to date has shown that a wide range of bacterial species are present and active in the CF lung. Moreover, many species that require anaerobic conditions for growth have been detected amongst a range of bacterial species not previously associated with the CF lung.
These studies are continuing – looking now at, amongst other aspects, the function of these bacteria in lung disease. Other respiratory conditions are also important. The Drug Delivery group also study the bacteria that are associated with the human gut mucosa in health and disease. These studies have shown that the bacteria associated with the gut mucosa of healthy individuals are quite distinct between individuals, yet are similar along the tract within an individual. This work is extending to study the gut in disease such as Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis.
The Drug Delivery group work extends beyond these areas. Group members are also working on models of community development, interactions between microbe and human cells, improving and assessing therapies and their delivery. Other group members are studying the interface between environments and humans. This focuses on issues of spatial scale and incorporates aspects of stress e.g. pollutants and other chemical agents on populations and communities. This work needs the involvement of other scientists and clinicians. The Drug Delivery group is very fortunate to have the active support of such groups in the UK (currently mainly Southampton, London, Belfast and Liverpool) and abroad (USA and Australia).
The focus is to move from characterisation of what microbes are present, to develop a better understanding of the function of these microbes. From this improved understanding, similar improvements may follow in the longer term in terms of the treatment of infection.
She reported for the first time the intrinsic anti-angiogenic activity of cationic poly-L-lysine dendrimers, and she pioneered surface engineering of carbon nanotube-based vectors to deliver siRNA materials to the central nervous system (CNS) and solid tumours in vivo. She is also a co-PI of a Nanotechnology Grand Challenges Healthcare Grant, and was a work package leader for FP6 and FP7 research programmes (2007-on going).
Current research interests:
Synthesis and characterisation of novel nanomaterials
Nanomedicine
Theranostic applications
Pharmacokinetic studies
Live small animal imaging by SPECT/CT and MRI imaging
RNAi
Gene delivery
Magnetic drug targeting
Stem cell research
Drug delivery to the BBB Multicellular tumour spheroid cultures
Solid and metastatic tumour models