Follow this blog:
RSS

No more big needles? Pain-free vaccine in the works

By | July 29, 2010, 4:00 AM PDT

Forget large, intimidating needles. Researchers in Georgia are developing a vaccine that feels more like a Band-Aid when administered. The vaccine patch contains hundreds of tiny microneedles that dissolve straight into the skin.

I spoke this week with Sean Sullivan, lead author of the study in Nature: Medicine and a former doctoral student at Georgia Institute of Technology, about the possibility of painless vaccines.

How can a vaccine be made painless?

It really ends up being the delivery device. Currently you use a needle because it’s effective. It’s been shown to deliver a countless number of drugs. It’s effective and most medically-trained personnel can deliver a shot. You usually go into the muscle because it’s easy. That’s the current use.

What we’re looking at is how to make it more patient compliant, how to make people want to get their injector. These microneedles, the reason they don’t hurt is that they don’t go deep enough to where the nerves are. A typical needle is multiple millimeters long. These microneedles are less than a millimeter in length. They’re so short that they go very shallow into the skin and they don’t reach where the nerves are. That’s why these don’t hurt and the current needle does.

How did you develop microneedles that could deliver vaccines?

The idea of microneedles has been around a number of years. In the late ’90s they really started looking into this, the idea of if you use a small needle it won’t hurt. How do we make this effective? They used a number of different technologies. They used glass, metal and silicone for microneedles. When I joined the project when I entered graduate school back in 2002, I was tasked to come up with a way of making a polymer microneedle. The main benefit of a polymer microneedle is it can dissolve in the skin and you have no needles left afterwards. Six years of a Ph.D. later, it works.

If the microneedles don’t go as deep as traditional needles, are they as effective?

This is actually where it gets really gets interesting. For vaccinations specifically, the skin is actually one of the places that people would like to deliver. The skin has a number of immune cells in it. If you can get a vaccine right there, you can actually get a stronger immune response with the same dose. Because of that you can give a lower dose and get the equal immune response. In theory, if you’re able to deliver to the skin and not the muscle for, let’s say, the flu vaccine, you can give a lower dose and get the same response. It’s great. How do you get things in the skin? That’s where you get microneedles. You’re delivering to those immune cells. Microneedles and vaccines are really a match made in heaven. It’s a delivery device that’s perfect for vaccinations. Not only does it not hurt, but you could theoretically get a lower dose with it.

How far along is the technology and what’s the next step?

I’m no longer at Georgia Tech. This technology is all at Georgia Tech and Emory. My adviser is continuing with it. All the vaccinations we did were in animals. The next step would be to move to human trials and I believe they’re working on that right now. The technology is ready to go there, but they would have to be tested in clinical trials first to make sure they’re safe and effective in humans.

In addition to being less painful and more effective, what are the other benefits of microneedles?

You don’t have a needle to get rid of afterwards, so there’s not even a possibility of a re-stick to yourself or someone else. Because that’s the case, there’s a possibility in the future that this could be used at home. You could pick this up at the pharmacy and apply it to yourself and throw the backing away. You could self administer. That’s how easy it is. It’s as easy as putting on a Band-Aid. The self administration idea could have a huge impact.

We talked about mass immunization efforts. With these, you could pick them up or it might be very quick. You don’t need highly-trained medical personnel to apply these to you. Another aspect we talked about is overseas in places where medically-trained personnel aren’t available as much, sharp disposal isn’t available, third-world countries. This would be a perfect vaccination device system for those locations.

Image, top: Microneedles on finger / Jeong-Woo Lee, Georgia Tech

Image, bottom: Sean Sullivan

Start your week smarter with our weekly e-mail newsletter. It's your cheat sheet for good ideas. Get it.

Christina Hernandez Sherwood

About Christina Hernandez Sherwood

Christina Hernandez Sherwood is a contributing writer for SmartPlanet.

Christina Hernandez Sherwood

Christina Hernandez Sherwood

Contributing Writer

Christina Hernandez Sherwood has written for the Los Angeles Times, Newsday, the Philadelphia Inquirer, Diverse: Issues in Higher Education and Columbia Journalism Review. She holds degrees from the University of Delaware and Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism. She is based in New Jersey.

Follow her on Twitter.

Christina Hernandez Sherwood

Christina Hernandez Sherwood

In the unlikely event that Christina has a professional or financial relationship with a company she writes about, it will be prominently disclosed.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

If you liked this, don't miss...
8
Comments

Join the conversation!

Follow via:
RSS
0 Votes
+ -
RE: No more big needles? Pain-free vaccine in the works
Vaccines do have their value... but we are over vaccinated. And
it seems the reason why we are over-vaccinated is because it is
so damn profitable. Pharm lobby influence on ignorant and/or
corrupt politicians is putting obscene amounts of taxpayer
dollars into the coffers pharmaceuticals The science isn't all
that good, but they also have the money to make sure the PR is!.
Plenty of reputable neurologists are ringing warning bells, but few
listen considering that news media makes a ton of money off of
add pushing drugs. Liberty be damned. Vaccines are more and
more becoming mandatory or jail.
Posted by Meryl333
29th Jul 2010
0 Votes
+ -
RE: No more big needles? Pain-free vaccine in the works
Are microneedles suitable for delivering insulin?
Posted by TimedRelease
29th Jul 2010
0 Votes
+ -
RE: No more big needles? Pain-free vaccine in the works
vaccinate at home is a long way off due to the chance of an allergic reaction, which under certain circumstances could kill in minutes. The human body evolved over 1000s of years is sometimes its worst enemy.
Posted by ronangel
29th Jul 2010
0 Votes
+ -
RE: No more big needles? Pain-free vaccine in the works
This is a great idea and long overdue. I hope it becomes a reality as soon as possible.

Am I the only one who found it difficult to make sense of the incredibly awful writing of this article? I understand it's in an interview format, but it was as painful to read as receiving an old-fashioned needle! I guess you don't need to speak well in order to get a Ph.D.
Posted by pantol
29th Jul 2010
0 Votes
+ -
RE: No more big needles? Pain-free vaccine in the works
Love the idea. Disagree w/ the person who said we are over-vaccinated--the issue is rather that drugs are far too expensive, largely because of the trial process and, in addition, the lobbies. When can we get this approach going? Am also interested in the possibility of delivering insulin this way, but because dosages are not 100% consistent, that method may not work.
Posted by jandnlarson2639@...
29th Jul 2010
0 Votes
+ -
RE: No more big needles? Pain-free vaccine in the works
I wish the research was going toward safety. A few seconds of pain is nothing compared to a lifetime of immune system damage. Follow the cash ...
Posted by B.A.
30th Jul 2010
0 Votes
+ -
RE: No more big needles? Pain-free vaccine in the works
@ TimedRelease
Currently insulin is delivered via subcutaneous injection. This
injects the insulin into the fatty layer below the skin. The fatty
tissues assist with the effective absorbance of the insulin, so with
the micro-needle system, it may require a higher dose (opposite
of the vaccine). Also insulin needs to be kept at cool
temperature, so depending how long it takes to absorb from the
micro-needle patch may also change its effectiveness.
I note that, if the subcutaneous injection is not delivered deep
enough (i.e. into the skin layer), then the patient still receives a
portion of the dose at a different rate, so they would still get some
via the patch.
The timeframe could be an issue as well, not just for
temperature, but Diabetics take insulin (usually before meals), so
when they get that sudden "hit" of glucose, there is insulin there
to take the glucose to where it's needed. Hence the insulin
needs to be absorbed in a fairly timely factor, which I couldn't
find anything in the article referring to the timing of deliver with
the micro-pin setup.

I do however like the way you're thinking with eliminating needles
for routine drug delivery. However I still think there is a place for
needles in healthcare.
Posted by rednickja@...
30th Jul 2010
0 Votes
+ -
RE: No more big needles? Pain-free vaccine in the works
This is an awesome ideal, i like it. I can imagine a child, going into the doctors office to get a shot, hollowing and screaming. He receives his shot, and mom says " its all over. And the child looks up, and say" what the crap". I didn't feel a thing.
Posted by blackjack861@...
1st Aug 2010
Join the conversation
Formatting +
BB Codes - Note: HTML is not supported in forums
  • [b] Bold [/b]
  • [i] Italic [/i]
  • [u] Underline [/u]
  • [s] Strikethrough [/s]
  • [q] "Quote" [/q]
  • [ol][*] 1. Ordered List [/ol]
  • [ul][*] · Unordered List [/ul]
  • [pre] Preformat [/pre]
  • [quote] "Blockquote" [/quote]

Join the SmartPlanet community and join the conversation! Signing up is fast and free. Don't wait -- we want to hear your opinion!