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An injectable PEG-like conjugate forms a subcutaneous depot and enables sustained delivery of a peptide drug.

Biomaterials · 2023

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers developed a new injectable drug that forms a long-lasting deposit under the skin to slowly release a diabetes medication called exendin. In tests, this new drug stayed effective longer than a similar version using PEG and Bydureon, a currently approved long-acting exendin treatment, without triggering an immune response that can reduce effectiveness over time.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalBiomaterials, 2023
Citations17
Relative citation ratio2.17
NIH percentile76
Molecules

Abstract

Many biologics have a short plasma half-life, and their conjugation to polyethylene glycol (PEG) is commonly used to solve this problem. However, the improvement in the plasma half-life of PEGylated drugs' is at an asymptote because the development of branched PEG has only had a modest impact on pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. Here, we developed an injectable PEG-like conjugate that forms a subcutaneous depot for the sustained delivery of biologics. The PEG-like conjugate consists of poly[oligo(ethylene glycol) methyl ether methacrylate] (POEGMA) conjugated to exendin, a peptide drug used in the clinic to treat type 2 diabetes. The depot-forming exendin-POEGMA conjugate showed greater efficacy than a PEG conjugate of exendin as well as Bydureon, a clinically approved sustained-release formulation of exendin. The injectable depot-forming exendin-POEGMA conjugate did not elicit an immune response against the polymer, so that it remained effective and safe for long-term management of type 2 diabetes upon chronic administration. In contrast, the PEG conjugate induced an anti-PEG immune response, leading to early clearance and loss of efficacy upon repeat dosing. The exendin-POEGMA depot also showed superior long-term efficacy compared to Bydureon. Collectively, these results suggest that an injectable POEGMA conjugate of biologic drugs that forms a drug depot under the skin, providing favorable pharmacokinetic properties and sustained efficacy while remaining non-immunogenic, offers significant advantages over other commonly used drug delivery technologies.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 36630826 ↗