Title of Invention

A PROCESS FOR THE PREPARATION OF A POLYMER COMPOSITE COMPRISIN INTERNALLY DISTRIBUTED DEPOSITION MATTER

Abstract A process for the preparation of a polymer composite comprising internally distributed deposition matter wherein the process comprises providing a deposit of deposition matter at the surface of a solid stale polymer substrate, contacting the surface deposited polymer with a plasticising fluid or a mixture of plasticising fluids under plasticising conditions to plasticise and/or swell the polymer and internally distribute deposition matter, and releasing the plasticising fluid or fluids to obtain polymer composite.; A polymer composite comprising a porous or non porcus polymer throughout which particulate deposition matter as hereinbefore defined is distributed with desired uniformity, preferably with high uniformity in excess of 80 % for example in excess of 98 %; A scaffold comprising a polymer composite having internally distributed deposition matter, and use of the composite as a support or scaflold lor drug delivery, for use in bioremediation, as a biocatalyst or biobarrier for human or animal or plant matter, for use as a structural component, for example comprising the polymer and optional additional synthelic or natural metal, plastic, carbon or glass fibre mesh, scrim, rod or like reinforcing for medical or surgical insertion, for insertion as a solid monolith into bone or tissue, as fillers or cements for wet insertion into bone or teen or as solid aggregates or monoliths for orthopaedic implants such as pins, or dental implants such as crowns etc.
Full Text A Process For The Preparation Of A Polymer Composite Comprising
Internally distributed Deposition Matter
The present invention relates to a process for the preparation of a polymer
composite comprising contacting polymer with plasticising fluid and deposition
matter and isolating polymer comprising internally distributed deposition
matter, the polymer composite obtained thereby, and apparatus for the
preparation thereof, a polymer scaffold, drug delivery device or the like
comprising the composite in suitably sized and shaped form, the use as a
pharmaceutical or veterinary product, a human or animal health or growth
promoting, structural, fragrance or cosmetic product, an agrochemical or crop
particularly as a biodegradable slow release product, or as biodegradable
surgical implant, synthetic bone composite, organ module, and the like or for
bioremediation, as a biocatalyst or biobarrier and the like.
The use of supereritical fluids in the produuction of polymers as a plasticising
foaming or purification agent is known. Supercritical fluids (SCFs) act as
plasticisers for many polymers, increasing the mobility of the polymer chains.
This results in an increase in the free volume within the polymeric material.
Supercritical fluid has found application in incorporation of dyes and other
inorganic materials which are insoluble in the supercritical fluid, for example
inorganic carbonates and oxides, into polymers with a good dispersion to
improve quality, in particular dispersion in products such as paints for spray
coating and the like.

Moreover the fluid can be used to foam the polymer by transition to non-critical
gaseous state whereby a porous material may be obtained and this has been
disclosed in US 5,340,614, WO91/09079 & US 4,598,006.
US 5,340,614 discloses simultaneously contacting polymer., impregnation
additive and SCF. US 4,598,006 discloses dissolving impregnation additive in
SCF, adding polymer and releasing fluid with transition to subcritical
conditions.
WO 91/09079 (De Ponti) discloses preloading polymer microspheres with an
active ingredient such as a drug by dissolving polymer in solvent, adding a
solution of active ingredient, and mixing in silicone oil to obtain loaded
microspheres. These are washed and hardened. Microspheres are then SCF
processed to produce a porous structure.
However the double emulsion process of WO 91/09079 has shown in some
cases only 68% retained drug activity compared with control and this is
attributed to solvent effects, homogenising the double emulsion, breaking up
droplets and the like.
Moreover this process is quite complex, requiring two polymer processing
stages, and does not necessarily ensure good internal distribution.
Polymers have also been used in biomedical applications to develop materials
in which biocompatibility can be influenced to promote favourable tissue
responses whilst also producing materials with acceptable mechanical and
surface properties. Biofunctional composite materials e.g. calcium

hydroxyapatite dispersed in various polymers are well established for
orthopaedic, dental and other applications. These materials are prepared with
very high loadings of inorganic solid, of up to 80%, in the form of a powder,
and a composite is formed either by vigorous mixing of the powdered material
into the solid or molten polymer, or by polymerisation of the monomers in the
presence of suspended inorganic powders. In both cases, the material becomes
entrapped within the polymer matrix.
These methods for preparation however are prone to insufficient and
uncontrolled mixing of material leading to large aggregate formation whereby
the composite is prone to fracture and may not be suitable for commercial
processing.
WO 98/51347 (Howdle et at) discloses the preparation by dense phase fluid
processing of biofunctional polymers comprising biofunctional material having
the desired mechanical properties both for commercial processing and for
implant into a human or animal host structure such as bone or cartilage, dental
and tissue structures into which they are surgically implanted for orthopaedic
bone and implant, prosthetic, dental filling or restorative applications, prolonged
release applications and the like,. Biofunctional material is in particular any
pharmaceutical, veterinary, agrochemical, human and animal health and growth
promoting, structural, cosmetic and toxin absorbing materials, such as a broad
range of inorganic or organic molecules, peptides, proteins, enzymes,
oligosaccharides, carbohydrates, nucleic acids and the like.
Particular application is in the production of bone composites formed from a
biofunctional polymer with inorganic calcium hydroxyapatite uniformly

distributed throughout. This process uses the addition of CO2 to plasticise
polymeric material and highly efficient stirring to ensure homogeneous
incorporation of particulate material throughout the polymer.
This and other work from the same authors has shown high uniformity.
However there is a need for further improved uniformity for both high and low
loading levels, with milder processing conditions. Therapeutic concentrations
of growth factors and other biotechnology drugs are of the order of ppb, whilst
those of biocompatibilisers such as hydroxyapatite are of the order of 80 wt%.
Greater uniformity manifests itself in more uniform prolonged release, and
stronger monolithic structures.
We have now surprisingly found that controlled internal distribution of matter
within a polymer composite can be achieved in a simple and reproducible
process, which enables the accurate and efficient handling of biologically active
molecules in small or large amount in solution while retaining the manifold
advantages of SCF processing. The present invention provides deposition of
matter on a polymer surface in a first stage and internal distribution and optional
pore formation in a second polymer plasticisation stage. This is in contrast to
WO 91/09079 which teaches dissolving polymer and emulsifying with
impregnation matter in a first stage, and plasticising in a second stage.
Accordingly in the broadest aspect of the invention there is provided a process
for the preparation of a polymer composite comprising internally distributed
deposition matter wherein the process comprises providing a deposit of
deposition matter at the surface of a solid state polymer substrate, contacting the
surface deposited polymer with a plasticising fluid, or a mixture of plasticising

fluids under plasticising conditions to plasticise and/or swell the polymer and
internally distribute deposition matter, and releasing the plasticising fluid or
fluids to obtain polymer composite.
Preferably the process comprises providing a deposit at the surface of a high
surface area polymer substrate, more preferably a powder bed or a high porosity
matrix. Preferably the process provides a deposition layer of deposition matter
on the internal and external surfaces of the polymer substrate, more preferably
any exposed surfaces, including any exposed surface pores. By this means a
more dilute deposit is formed which is of greater uniformity than depositing the
same quantity of material on a smaller surface area. Deposition may be over the
entire surface area or only part or parts thereof.
Preferably a porous solid state polymer substrate is obtained by contacting
polymer with plasticising fluid and subsequently releasing fluid in suitable
manner to foam the polymer as is known in the art. In a preferred embodiment
therefore the process comprises in a first stage contacting polymer with
plasticising fluid or a mixture of plasticising fluids under plasticising conditions
to plasticise the polymer, and releasing the fluid to obtain a solid state substrate
polymer; in a second stage providing a surface deposit of deposition matter at
the surface of the polymer, and in a third stage contacting the surface deposited
polymer with a plasticising fluid or a mixture of plasticising fluids under
plasticising conditions to plasticise and/or swell the polymer and internally
distribute deposition matter, and releasing the plasticising fluid or fluids to
obtain polymer composite. Preferably in the first stage the plasticising and
releasing the fluid(s) is in manner to foam the polymer and obtain a porous solid
state substrate polymer, for use in the second stage.

The product composite may be porous or non-porous, even if obtained from a
porous substrate. It is a particular advantage that porosity may serve to facilitate
surface deposition, but be of little interest in the product composite or vice versa
or a combination thereof.
Deposition may be of discrete particles or of dissolved deposition matter and
may be by solid or fluid phase deposition. Preferably deposition matter is
provided in fluid phase, and deposition comprises immersion., spraying and the
like with a solution, dispersion or suspension of deposition matter and drying
by freezing, evaporation, heating, blotting etc.
Alternatively deposition matter is provided in solid phase and deposition
comprises powder coating, dusting, rolling or adhering.
Deposition may be aided by softening or adhesion of surface polymer, in
particularly in the case of deposition of insoluble or dry phase deposition matter.
Deposition may be with or without physical interaction with the polymer
surface. In a particularly preferred embodiment, on contacting polymer substrate
with a solution, dispersion or suspension of deposition matter, the deposition
matter adsorbs from liquid phase onto the polymer surface and forms an
adsorption layer of deposition matter at desired levels. This layer remains intact
to solvent and impact effects and the like, for example if subsequently surface
washed with liquids.
Immersion time may be of the order 1 second up to 48 hours, depending on the

materials used. Drying time may be up to 48 hours depending on sensitivity to
extreme heat or freezing or the like.
Preferably deposition matter is provided in particulate or powder form and may
be of particle size in the range up to 1mm, preferably 50 - 1000 micron.
Deposition matter may be of uniform or mixed particle size, depending on
practical constraints and the required distribution, and may be of same or
different matter.
The polymer is suitably in the solid phase or is a highly viscous fluid and may
present limited or good mixing characteristics. Solid phase polymer may be
particulate, eg in the form of granules, pellets, microspheres, powder, or
monolithic eg matrix form. Plasticising conditions comprise conditions of
reduced viscosity to plasticise and/or swell the polymer. It is known that
particulate polymer agglomerates on plasticisation to a larger structure. This
may revert to a particulate composite or form a monolithic composite on release
of plasticising fluid, as hereinbelow defined. Polymer volumes of 5 or 10 mg
or g up to multi kg scale may be used.
Reference herein to a plasticising fluid is to a fluid which is able to plasticise
polymer in its natural state or in supercritical, near critical, dense phase or
subcritical state. Fluid may be liquid or gaseous, and is preferably selected for
a suitable density which is capable of plasticising a given polymer, fluid density
may be in the range 0.001 g/ml up to 10 g/ml for example 0.001 g/ml up to 2
g/ml.
Plasticising conditions comprises elevated or ambient temperature, and/or

elevated or ambient pressure. Fluid may be selected for effective plasticisation
of a given polymer under conditions which are amenable to the deposition
matter or alternatively fluid is selected by preferred chemical type and suitable
plasticising conditions are chosen for that fluid, preferably selecting a first
amenable condition (T) and compensating with second condition (P) to obtain
desired density.
Preferably the plasticising conditions comprise a desired temperature less than,
equal to or greater than the fluids critical temperature (Tc) in the range -200°C
to +500°C, preferably -200°C to 200°C, more preferably -100 to +100°C, for
example -80 or -20°C to +200 or +100°C. For most fluids this will be in the
range approximately 10 to 15°C, 15 to 25°C, 25 to 30°C, 30 to 35°C, 35 to 45°C
or 45 to 55°C, most preferably approximately 28 to 33°C (CO2). Other sub
ranges may be envisaged and are within the scope of the invention. Preferably
the lowest temperature is employed which is compatible with sufficient
lowering of the polymer Tg to achieve plasticisation. To operate at ambient
temperature, the process of the invention may require compensation by increase
in pressure.
Preferably the plasticising fluid comprises a desired pressure less than, equal to
or greater than the plasticising fluids critical pressure (Pc) from in excess of 1
bar to 10000 bar, preferably 1 to 1000, more preferably 2 to 800 bar, more
preferably 2 to 400 bar, more preferably 5 to 265 bar, most preferably 15 to 75
bar. For most fluids this will be in the range approximately 30 to 40 bar, 40 to
50 bar, 50 to 60 bar, 60 to 75 bar or 80 to 215 bar, and is most preferably
approximately 34 to 75 bar for dense phase or supercritical CO2. Other sub
ranges may be envisaged and are within the scope of this invention.

Fluid may be provided at plasticising conditions prior to contacting with
polymer and deposition matter or may be brought to plasticising conditions in
contact with surface deposited polymer.
Preferably the process is carried out for a contact time of surface deposited
polymer and plasticising fluid of 1 millisecond up to 5 hours. Short contact time
may be preferred for example 2 milliseconds up to 10 minutes, more preferably
20 milliseconds to 5 minutes, more preferably 1 second to 1 minute, more
preferably 2 to 30 seconds, most preferably 2 to 15 seconds. Alternatively long
contact time minimises detrimental effects of pressurising the vessel, and allows
superior distribution, for example 15 minutes to 2 hours, preferably 15 minutes
to 40 minutes or 30 minutes to 1 hour.
Pressurising plasticising fluid may be in situ, or ex situ prior to contacting with
surface deposited polymer as hereinbefore defined. The pressurisation period
whereby in the case of in situ or ex situ pressurisation the fluid is pressurised or
is introduced to the surface deposited polymer, is suitably for a period of 1
second to 3 minutes, more preferably from 1 second to 1 minute, more
preferably from 1 to 45 seconds.
The process may be carried out with or without stirring or blending. Blending
and conditions may be selected to assist plasticisation or according to the
desired uniformity and distribution of loading. In the case that uniform
distribution is required the process preferably comprises blending for prolonged
period and/or high intensity. In the case that non-uniform distribution is
envisaged, the process may be carried out simply with stirring.

Blending may be by physical mixing, pumping, agitation for example with
aeration or fluidising gas flow, lamellar flow or otherwise impregnation or
diffusion of plasticising fluid throughout the surface deposited polymer.
Stirring is typically with use of stirrers and impellers, preferably helical
impellers such as helical ribbon impellers for enhanced blending and the like.
Blending may be for a period of 1 millisecond up to 5 hours and may be for the
duration of contacting with plasticising fluid or otherwise. Preferably stirring
or blending is for substantially the duration of contacting with plasticising fluid,
with period of stirring or blending corresponding to period of plasticising fluid
contacting as hereinbefore defined.
The process comprises subsequently releasing the plasticising fluid. In the case
that plasticising conditions comprises elevated pressure release is under reduced
pressure conditions, conducted over a desired depressurisation period, whereby
the polymer composite is obtained comprising internally distributed deposition
matter. Depressurisation may be achieved in situ, by depressurising a pressure
vessel in which the process is carried out, whereby a monolithic block of
polymer composite is obtained. Alternatively the contents of a pressure vessel
in which the process is conducted may be discharged into a second pressure
vessel at lower pressure whereby a homogeneous powder of polymer composite
as hereinbefore defined is obtained by known means.
Release of fluid may be in manner to foam the polymer substrate and create a
porous structure, with deposition matter distributed throughout the polymer
matrix and internal pore surface. Typically this is achieved by rapid release over

a period of up to 2 minutes.
Depressurisation period may be selected to foam the polymer if desired, and
therefore determines the porosity of composite. Transition is preferably rapid
over a period of from 1 ms to 10 minutes, preferably from 1 second to 3
minutes, more preferably from 1 to 3 seconds for high porosity polymer.
Alternatively plasticising fluid may be released in manner to allow fluid
diffusion out of the polymer, avoiding foaming, to create a non-porous
structure. Typically this is achieved by prolonged gradual release of fluid over
a period of in excess of 10 minutes up to 12 hours. Preferably transition is to
near ambient pressure i.e. substantially 1 arm (101.325 kPa).
The process may be carried out in the presence or absence of additional solvents
or fluids. In the case of physical interaction of deposition matter with the
polymer surface additional solvents or fluids may be used without affecting the
uniform deposition layer. Preferably however the process is carried out in the
absence of solvent capable of dissolving the deposition matter. Suitable carriers,
agents, preservation agents and the like may be employed as desired.
A plasticising fluid as hereinbefore defined may comprise any fluid which is
capable of plasticising a desired polymer. As is known in the art such fluids may
be subjected to conditions of elevated temperature and pressure increasing
density thereof up to and beyond a critical point at which the equilibrium line
between liquid and vapour regions disappears. Supercritical and dense phase
fluids are characterised by properties which are both gas like and liquid like.
In particular, the fluid density and solubility properties resemble those of
liquids, whilst the viscosity, surface tension and fluid diffusion rate in any

medium resemble those of a gas, giving gas like penetration of the medium.
Preferred plasticising fluids include carbon dioxide, di-nitrogen oxide, carbon
disulphide, aliphatic C2-10 hydrocarbons such as ethane, propane, butane,
pentane, hexane, ethylene, and halogenated derivatives thereof such as for
example carbon tetrafluoride or chloride and carbon monochloride trifluoride,
and fluoroform or chloroform, C6-10 aromatics such as benzene, toluene and
xylene, C1-3 alcohols such as methanol and ethanol, sulphur halides such as
sulphur hexafluoride, ammonia, xenon, krypton and the like, and mixtures
thereof. Typically these fluids may be brought into plasticising conditions at
temperature of between -200°C to + 500°C and pressures of in excess of 1 bar
to 10000 bar, as hereinbefore defined. It will be appreciated that the choice of
fluid may be made according to its properties, for example diffusion and
polymer plasticisation. Preferably the fluid acts as solvent for residual
components of a polymer composite as hereinbefore defined but not for polymer
or deposition matter as hereinbefore defined. Choice of fluid may also be made
with regard to critical conditions which facilitate the commercial preparation of
the polymer as hereinbefore defined. Supercritical conditions are shown of some
fluids in Table 1.



Preferably the plasticising fluid comprises carbon dioxide optionally in
admixture with any further fluids as hereinbefore defined or mixed with
conventional solvents, so-called "modifiers". CO2 is generally approved by
regulatory bodies for medical applications, is chemically inert, leaves no residue
and is freely available.
The plasticising fluid may be present in any effective amount with respect to the
polymer. Preferably the plasticising fluid is provided at a desired concentration
in the reaction vessel to give a desired plasticisation and/or swelling of polymer.
Such range may be from 1% to 200% of the polymer weight, e.g. with

plasticising fluid in sufficient excess to achieve 10% to 40% absorption with
respect to polymer weight.
The deposition matter may be present in any effective amount with respect to
polymer. Typical values are therefore 1 x 10-12 wt % to 99.9 wt%, preferably
0.01 or 0.1 to 99.0 wt%, more preferably greater than 0.5 wt% or 1.0 wt% up
to 50 wt%. In a particularly preferred embodiment therefore the process is
carried out in low volumes of the order of picogram and nanogram levels with
respect to 5g amounts of polymer. For example, presented as concentration of
deposition matter on polymer, low volumes in the range 1x101 to 1x103 ng/mg
may be present, for example 50 to 150 ng/mg. This is beneficial for most
biologically active molecules such as enzymes or protein molecules because
their therapeutic concentrations are very low. For example: the therapeutic
amount of the growth factor HGF (hepatocyte growth factor) required to
provide a therapeutic response in liver cells during liver regeneration process
in tissue engineering is 10 ng/ml ((Tsubouchi, Niitani et al. 1991).
The deposition matter may be selected from any desired matter adapted to
perform a function on a desired biolocus comprising or otherwise associated
with living matter, and which may be bioactive, bioinert, biocidal or the like;
and non-biofunctional material including dyes, additives and the like.
Preferably deposition matter is selected from a component, or precursor,
derivative or analogue thereof, of a host structure into which implantation or
incorporation is desired and preferably comprises matter intended for growth or
repair, shielding, protection, modification or modelling of a human, animal,
plant or other living host structure for example the skeleton, organs, dental

structure and the like; to combat antagonists; for metabolism of poisons, toxins,
waste and the like or for synthesis of useful products by natural processes, for
bioremediation, biosynthesis, biocatalysis or the like.
More specifically the deposition material includes but is not limited to the
following examples typically classed as (pharmaceutical) drugs and veterinary
products; agrochemicals as pest and plant growth control agents; human and
animal health products; human and animal growth promoting, structural, or
cosmetic products including products intended for growth or repair or modelling
of the skeleton, organs, dental structure and the like; absorbent biodeposition
materials for poisons, toxins and the like.
Pharmaceuticals and veterinary products, i.e. drugs, may be defined as any
pharmacologically active compounds that alter physiological processes with the
aim of treating, preventing, curing, mitigating or diagnosing a disease.
Drugs may be composed of inorganic or organic molecules, peptides, proteins,
enzymes, oligosaccharides, carbohydrates, nucleic acids and the like.
Drugs may include but not be limited to compounds acting to treat the
following:
Infections such as antiviral drugs, antibacterial drugs, antifungal drugs,
antiprotozal drugs, anthelmintics,

Cardiovascular system such as positive inotropic drugs, diuretics, anti-
arrhythmic drugs, beta-adrenoceptor blocking drugs, calcium channel blockers,
sympathomimetics, anticoagulants, antiplatelet drugs, fibrinolytic drugs, lipid-
lowering drugs;
Gastro-intestinal system agents such as antacids, antispasmodics, ulcer-healing,
drugs, anti-diarrhoeal drugs, laxatives, central nervous system, hypnotics and
anxiolytics, antipsychotics, antidepressants, central nervous system stimulants,
appetite suppressants, drugs used to treat nausea and vomiting, analgesics,
antiepileptics, drugs used in parkinsonism, drugs used in substance dependence;
Malignant disease and immunosuppresion agents such as cytotoxic drugs,
immune response modulators, sex hormones and antagonists of malignant
diseases;
Respiratory system agents such as bronchodilators, corticosteroids,
cromoglycate and related therapy, antihistamines., respiratory stimulants,
pulmonary surfactants, systemic nasal decongestants;
Musculoskeletal and joint diseases agents such as drugs used in rheumatic
diseases, drugs used in neuromuscular disorders; and
Immunological products and vaccines.
Agrochemicals and crop protection products may be defined as any pest or plant
growth control agents, plant disease control agents, soil improvement agents
and the like. For example pest growth control agents include insecticides,

miticides, rodenticides, molluscicides, slugicides, vermicides (nematodes,
anthelmintics), soil fumigants, pest repellants and attractants such as
pheromones etc, chemical warfare agents, and biological control agents such as
microorganisms, predators and natural products;
plant growth control agents include herbicides, weedicides, defoliants,
dessicants, fruit drop and set controllers, rooting compounds, sprouting
inhibitors, growth stimulants and retardants, moss and lichen controllers and
plant genetic controllers or agents;
plant disease control agents include fungicides, viricides, timber preservatives
and bactericides; and
soil improvement agents include fertilisers, trace metal additives, bacterial
action control stimulants and soil consolidation agents.
The deposition matter may alternatively or additionally comprise any function
enhancing components, including naturally occurring or synthetic otherwise
modified growth promoters, biocompatibilisers, vitamins, proteins,
glycoproteins, enzymes, nucleic acid, carbohydrates, minerals, nutrients,
steroids, ceramics and the like and functioning matter such as spores, viruses,
mammalian, plant and bacterial cells. Preferred deposition matter includes
growth factors selected from biocompatibilisers, vitamins, proteins,
glycoproteins, enzymes, nucleic acid, carbohydrates, minerals, nutrients,
steroids, ceramics and the like; in particular growth factors such as basic
Fibroblastic Growth Factor, acid Fibroblastic Growth Factor, Epidermal Growth
Factor, Human Growth Factor, Insulin Like Growth Factor, Platelet Derived
Growth Factor, Nerve Growth Factor and ,Transforming Growth Factor and
bone morphogenetic proteins; antitumorals such as BCNU or 1, 3-bis (2-
chloroethyl) -1-nitrosourea, daunorubicin, doxorubicin, epirubicin, idarubicin,

4-demethoxydaunorubicin 3'-desamine-3' - (3-cyano-4-morpholinyl) -
doxorubicin, 4-demethoxydaunorubicin-3' -desamine-3' - (2-methoxy-4-
morpholinyl) -doxorubicin, etoposide and teniposide; hormones such as LHRH
and LHRH analogues; and steroideals for birth control and/or antitumoral action
such as medroxyprogesterone acetate or megestrol acetate; tricalcium phosphate
or the class of apatite derivatives, for example calcium hydroxyapatite which
functions as a bone or dental component and promotes biocompatability, silicon
which functions as a tissue modelling component, and analogues, precursors or
functional derivatives thereof, bioactive species such as collagen, bioglasses and
bioceramics, other minerals, hyaluran, polyethyleneoxide, CMC
(carboxymethylcellulose), proteins, organic polymers, and the like and
components adapted for incorporation as implants into meniscus, cartilage,
tissue and the like and preferably promote growth, modelling, enhancing or
reinforcing of collagen, fibroblasts and other natural components of these host
structures.
Absorbent deposition matter for poisons, toxins and the like may be defined as
any natural or synthetic products capable of immobilising by absorption,
interaction, reaction or otherwise of naturally occurring or artificially introduced
poisons or toxins.
The deposition matter may be in any desired form suited for the function to be
performed, for example in solid, semi-solid such as thixotrope or gel form,
semi-fluid or fluid such as paste or liquid form, and may be miscible or
immiscible but is insoluble in the polymer and plasticising fluid, eg as a
suspension. It may be convenient to adapt the deposition matter form to render
it in preferred form for processing and the function to be performed. The matter

is preferably in the form of solid particles having particle size selected
according to the desired application. Preferably particle size is of similar or of
lesser order to that of the polymer composite, and optionally of any pores,
preferably 10-9m - 10-2, for example of the order of picometers, nanometers,
micrometers, millimetres or centimetres.
The polymer composite may be in desired form suitable for the hereinbefore
mentioned uses. For application to living matter, the polymer composite may
be introduced as a dry or wet spray, powder, pellets, granules, monoliths and the
like, comprising the deposition material substrate in releasable manner by
dissolution, evaporation or the like, for example in the hereinbefore defined
agrochemical, insecticidal and the like uses. For administration as a healthcare,
pharmaceutical or the like composition to the human or animal body, the
composition may be suitably formulated according to conventional practices.
For use as pharmaceutical and veterinary products fabricated using the inventive
process composites may be in the form of creams, gels, syrups, pastes, sprays,
solutions, suspensions, powders, microparticles, granules, pills, capsules,
tablets, pellets, suppositories, pessaries, colloidal matrices, monoliths and
boluses and the like, for administration by topical, oral, rectal, parenteral,
epicutaneous, mucosal, intravenous, intramuscular, intrarespiratory or like.
The composite may be non porous or porous, and may comprise open or closed
cell pores. Composite obtained with a very open porous structure, known as
microcellular, is ideal for prolonged or staged release, for pharmaceutical and
animal health etc applications as hereinbefore defined, also for biomedical and
biocatalytic applications for example supporting growth of blood vessels and

collagen fibres throughout the matrix, and forming structures resembling bone,
meniscus, cartilage, tissue and the like, and providing a structure for throughput
of substrate for biocatalysis and bioremediation and the like.
Non-porous, open or closed cell composite may be useful for biodegradable
staged or prolonged release delivery applications of deposition matter not
requiring leaching in or out or other access. Release may be in vitro or in vivo
and by parenteral, oral, intravenous, application or surgical for release proximal
to the treatment locus, eg in tissue tumor treatment, or hyperthermic bone tumor
treatment.
A porous polymer composite may be obtained with uniform or varied porosity,
preferably provides pores of at least two different orders of magnitude, for
example of micro and macro type, each present in an amount of between 1 and
99% of the total void fraction of the polymer composite.
Reference herein to micro and macro pores is therefore to be understood to be
respectively pores of any unit dimension and its corresponding 10n multiple.
For example micro pores may be of the order of 10-(10-7)m with respective
macro pores of the order of 10-(7-5)m, preferably 10-(8-7)m and 10-(6-5)m
respectively, more preferably of micron and 102 micron order, for example 50
to 200 micron. The pores may be of any desired configuration. Preferably the
pores form a network of tortuous interlinking channels, more preferably wherein
the micro pores interlink between the macro pores.
Deposition matter may be distributed throughout relatively smaller and
relatively larger pores or confined to larger pores. Deposition matter may be

embedded in the walls of pores or may be freely supported but not encased in
polymer matrix.
An open cell structure may create a channel structure throughout the polymer
composite, for leaching in and out of fluids for prolonged release, or for supply
and removal of materials, in particular fluids and release matter. Different
particle size deposition matter may selectively distribute between smaller and
larger pores.
A composite created in this maimer may enhance the biomechanical properties
of the polymer, in contrast to that of known polymers comprising
inhomogeneous distribution and large aggregates of inorganic materials.
The process may be controlled in manner to determine the dimensions and void
fraction of micro and macro pores and the morphology of the final product. The
period for plasticising fluid release determines in part the level of porosity.
Additionally the difference in pressure is proportional to porosity. Also a higher
critical temperature confers a higher porosity. The composite is suitably
obtained with porosity of 15% to 75% or greater, preferably 50% up to 97%.
Suitably the polymer retains its solid or highly viscous fluid form subsequent
to release of plasticising fluid, in order to retain the porous structure induced by
the fluid.
Further processing of the polymer, for example additional extraction with super
critical fluid as known in the art or with other extractants, post-polymerisation
and cross-linking, may be subsequently performed as required and as known in

the art.
The polymer may be selected from any known polymer, (block) copolymer,
mixtures and blends thereof which may be crosslinked or otherwise, which is
suited for introduction into or association with the human or animal body, plants
or other living matter, or in vitro, or for use in the environment in non-toxic
manner. Suitable polymer materials are selected from synthetic biodegradable
polymers as disclosed in "Polymeric Biomaterials" ed. Severian Dumitriu, ISBN
0-8247-8969-5, Publ. Marcel Dekker, New York, USA, 1994, bioresorbable
polymers synthetic non-biodegradable polymers; and natural polymers.
Preferably the polymer is selected from homopolymers, block and random
copolymers, polymeric blends and composites of monomers which may be
straight chain, (hyper) branched or cross-linked.
Polymer may be of any molecular weight for the desired application, and is
suitably in the range of from 1 to 1,000,000 repeat units. Higher molecular
weight may be useful for longer release patterns or slower degradation.
Polymers may include but are not limited to the following which are given as
illustration only.
Synthetic biodegradable polymers may be selected from:
Polyesters including poly(lactic acid), poly(glycolic acid), copolymers of lactic
and gly colic acid, copolymers of lactic and gly colic acid with poly (ethylene
glycol), poly(e-caprolactone), poly(3-hydroxybutyrate), poly(p-dioxanone),
polypropylene fumarate);

Preferably polylactides include DD, DL, LL enantiomers and are prepared from
D and L lactic acid and glycolic acid monomers, or a combination thereof, or
monomers such as 3-propiolactone tetramethylglycolide, b-butyrolactone, 4-
butyrolactone, pivavolactone and intermolecular cyclic esters of alpha-hydroxy
butyric acid, alpha-hydroxyisobutyric acid, alpha-hydroxyvaleric acid, alpha-
hydroxyisovaleric acid, alpha-hydroxycaproic acid, alpha-hydroxy- alpha-
ethylbutyric acid, alpha-hydroxyisocaproic acid, alpha-hydroxy-3-methylvaleric
acid, alpha-hydroxyheptanoic acid, alpha-hydroxyoctanoic acid, alpha-
hydroxydecanoic acid, alpha-hydroxymyristic acid, alpha-hydroxystearic acid,
and alpha-hydroxylignoceric acid. It is most preferred to use lactic acid as sole
monomer or lactic acid as the principal monomer with glycolic acid as the
comonomer. The latter are termed poly(lactide-co-glycolide) copolymers;
particularly suitable are polymers prepared from lactic acid alone, glycolic acid
alone, or lactic acid and glycolic acid wherein the glycolic acid is present as a
comonomer in a molar ratio of 100:0 to 40:60;
Poly (ortho esters) including Polyol/diketene acetals addition polymers as
described by Heller in: ACS Symposium Series 567, 292-305, 1994;
Polyanhydrides including poly(sebacic anhydride) (PSA),
poly(carboxybisbarboxyphenoxyphenoxyhexane) (PCPP), poly[bis(p-
carboxyphenoxy) methane] (PCPM), copolymers of SA, CPP and CPM, as
described by Tamada and Langer in Journal of Biomaterials Science- Polymer
Edition, 3, 315-353,1992 and by Domb in Chapter 8 of the Handbook of

Biodegradable Polymers, ed. Domb A.J. and Wiseman R.M., Harwood
Academic Publishers;
Poly(amino acids); polyacetals; polyketals; polyorthoesters;
Poly(pseudo amino acids) including those described by James and Kohn in
pages 389-403 of Controlled Drug Delivery Challenges and Strategies,
American Chemical Society, Washington DC;
Polyphosphazenes including derivatives of poly[(dichloro) phosphazene],
poly[(organo) phosphazenes], polymers described by Schacht in Biotechnology
and Bioengineering, 52, 102-108, 1996; and
Azo polymers
Including those described by Lloyd in International Journal of Pharmaceutics,
106,255-260,1994.
Synthetic Non-biodegradable Polymers may be selected from:
Vinyl polymers including polyethylene, poly(ethylene-co-vinyl acetate),
polypropylene, poly(vinyl chloride), poly(vinyl acetate), poly(vinyl alcohol) and
copolymers of vinyl alcohol and. vinyl acetate, poly(acrylic acid)
poly(methacrylic acid), polyacrylamides, polymethacrylamides, polyacrylates,
Poly(ethylene glycol), Poly(dimethyl siloxane), Polyurethanes, Polycarbonates,
Polystyrene and derivatives.

Natural Polymers may be selected from carbohydrates, polypeptides and
proteins including:
Starch, Cellulose and derivatives including ethylcellulose, rnethylcellulose,
ethylhydroxyethylcellulose, sodium carboxymethylcellulose; Collagen; Gelatin;
Dextran and derivatives; Alginates; Chitin; and Chitosan;
Preferably a non biodegradable polymer is selected from polymers such as ester
urethanes or epoxy, bis-maleimides, methacrylates such as methyl or glycidyl
methacrylate, tri-methylene carbonate, di-methylene tri-methylene carbonate;
biodegradable synthetic polymers such as glycolic acid, glycolide, lactic acid,
lactide, p-dioxanone, dioxepanone, alkylene oxalates and caprolactones such as
gamma-caprolactone.
Polymer substrate may be obtained from its precursors in the process of the
invention. The precursors may react to form the polymer substrate(s) in situ
during or subsequent to plasticising fluid processing.
The polymer may comprise any additional polymeric components having
performance enhancing or controlling effect, for example determining the
degree and nature of cross-linking for desired degradation, release, or fluid
access, fiexural and general mechanical properties, electrical properties and the
like.
Additional components which may be incorporated during the manufacture of
the polymer composite, for example other active agents, initiators, accelerators,
hardeners, stabilisers, antioxidants, adhesion promoters, fillers and the like may

be incorporated within the polymer. Additional materials(s) may be mixed with
the polymer before or after contacting with deposition matter, or may be
introduced by subsequent soaking or impregnation of the product composite
having internally distributed deposition matter.
If it is desired to introduce an adhesion promoter into the polymer composite,
the promoter may be used to impregnate or coat particles of deposition matter
prior to introduction into the polymer composite, by means of simple mixing,
spraying or other known coating steps, in the presence or absence of fluid as
hereinbefore defined. Preferably coating is performed in conjunction with
mixing with fluid as hereinbefore defined whereby excellent coating is obtained.
For example the adhesion promoter is dissolved in fluid as hereinbefore defined
and the solution is contacted with particles of deposition matter as hereinbefore
defined. Alternatively the adhesion promoter is introduced into the autoclave
during the mixing and/or polymerisation step whereby it attaches to particles
of deposition matter in desired maimer.
Preferably the total amount of fillers including the deposition matter lies in the
region of 0.01-99.9 wt %, preferably 0.1-99 wt%, more preferably in excess of
50 or 60 wt%, up to for example 70 or 80 wt %.
In some cases it may be desirable to introduce an initiator or accelerator to
initiate (partial) curing prior to and/or subsequent to release of fluid, and
initiation may be simultaneous with introduction or may be delayed, activated
by increase in temperature. Alternatively a spray drying step may be employed
in place of the curing step prior to or simultaneously with release of the fluid.
In this case a post-curing may be employed. This may have advantages in terms

of ease of manufacturing and simplicity of apparatus employed.
In a further aspect of the invention there is provided a polymer composite
obtained with the process of the invention as hereinbefore defined.
In a further aspect of the invention there is provided a polymer composite
comprising a porous or non porous polymer throughout which particulate
deposition matter as hereinbefore defined is distributed with desired uniformity,
preferably with high uniformity in excess of 80% for example in excess of 9S%.
In a particular advantage the composite comprises exceedingly low levels of
deposition matter of the order of picograms or nanograms per 5 g polymer, or
presented as concentration of deposition matter on polymer, in low volumes in
the range 1x101 to 1x103 ng/mg at excellent levels of uniformity and batch
reproducibility, and/or of very low particle size of the order of 10 microns, 1
micron or 0.1 microns.
In a further advantage, contrasted with other methods of encapsulating (e.g.
double emulsion) and introducing biological material which give rise to
relatively large particles which give an uneven release with time, the process of
the present invention enables internally distributing very small particles of
deposition matter thus giving a much even release profile (reduced burst phase
effect). Moreover the composite of the invention has been found to give release
over a period of several months, and this is in contrast to the corresponding
surface deposited polymer which may lose its surface deposit over the course
of days.
The composite of the invention may be distinguished from prior art: composite

prepared by simple impregnation techniques and those of WO 91/09079 which
show agglomeration of impregnation matter etc.
Advantageously it has been found that very low and veiy high loading may be
obtained according to the process of the present invention, which is not possible
with known processes, by virtue of the uniform morphology of polymer and
deposition matter, and loadings of deposition matter in the range from 1x10-
12 - 99.9 wt %, for example in the region 1 x 10 -12 to 1 x 10 -9 wt %,
midrange of from 20 to 50 wt% or in excess of 50 wt%, or in excess of 80 wt%
may be obtained.
The polymer composite may be in desired form suitable for the hereinbefore
mentioned uses. Suitably the composite may be obtained in granular or
monolith form and is preferably in monolith form for use as a scaffold or drug
delivery device.
For use as bioremediation, biocatalyst or biobarrier for human or animal or plant
matter, the composite may be in a suitable shaped form or may be impregnated
into a shaped product, to provide a barrier film, membrane, layer, clothing or
sheet.
For use as a structural component, for example comprising the polymer and
optional additional synthetic or natural metal, plastic, carbon or glass fibre
mesh, scrim, rod or like reinforcing for medical or surgical insertion, the
composite may be adapted for dry or wet insertion into a desired host structure,
for example may be in powder, pellet, granule or monolith form suited for
insertion as a solid monolith into bone or tissue, as fillers or cements for wet

insertion into bone or teeth or as solid aggregates or monoliths for orthopaedic
implants such as pins, or dental implants such as crowns etc. Insertion may be
by injection, surgical insertion and the like.
The polymer composite may be of any desired particle size in the range of 0.1
or 1 micron powders, preferably from 50 or 200 micron for use with larger
particle size deposition matter up to monoliths of the order of 20 centimetres
magnitude. It is a particular advantage of the present invention that the polymer
composite is obtained in the desired form in uniform size particles such as
powder, pellets and the like. Accordingly if it is desired to obtain a random or
discrete distribution of particle size the polymer composite may be milled or
may be blended from different size batches.
Composite particle size may be controlled according to known techniques by
controlled removal of plasticising fluid. If it is desired to obtain particulate
composite, the process mixture is suitably removed from the mixing chamber
under plasticising conditions into a separate container under ambient conditions
through a nozzle or like orifice of desired aperture, and under desired difference
of conditions and removal rate, adapted to provide the desired particle size.
Spray drying apparatus and techniques may commonly be employed for the
technique.
If it is desired to obtain a polymer composite in the form of monoliths, the
plasticising fluid is suitably removed using known techniques for foaming
polymers. Accordingly the polymer mix is retained in the reaction vessel and
conditions are changed from plasticising to ambient at a desired rate to cause
removal of the fluid from the polymer mix. Depending on the nature of the

polymer it is possible to obtain the monolith in porous foamed state if desired,
having interconnecting pores and channels created by the removal of the
plasticising fluid, simply by selecting a polymer consistency which is adapted
to retain its foamed state.
Monoliths may be formed into desired shape during the processing thereof, for
example by removal of plasticising fluid from a mixing vessel, or from a mould
internal to mixing vessel having the desired monolith shape. Alternatively
monolith may be removed from the mixing vessel and cut to desired shape or
transferred directly into a mould.
In a further aspect of the invention there is provided a scaffold comprising a
polymer composite having internally distributed deposition matter as
hereinbefore defined, suitably sized and shaped for a desired application as
hereinbefore defined.
A scaffold according to the invention is suitably in the form of a surgical
implant, synthetic bone composite, organ module, biocatalyst for remediation
or synthesis, or the like. The scaffold may be biodegradable or otherwise, for
biodegradation in the body and ingrowth by native cells, or for biodegradation
in the environment after completion of bioremediation avoiding in each case the
need for subsequent operation to remove the polymer.
In a further aspect of the invention mere is provided an apparatus for use in the
preparation of a polymer composite as hereinbefore defined. Suitably the
apparatus comprises one or more pressure vessels adapted for temperature and
pressure elevation and comprising means for mixing the contents. The pressure

vessel may include means for depressurisation or for discharging of contents
into a second pressure vessel at lower pressure. The apparatus comprises means
for introduction of polymer, deposition matter and plasticising fluid and any
other materials whilst the vessel is pressurised, as commonly known in the art.
In a further aspect of the invention there is provided a polymer composite as
hereinbefore defined or a scaffold thereof for use as a support or scaffold for
drug delivery, for use in bioremediation, as a biocatalyst or biobarrier for human
or animal or plant matter, for use as a structural component, for example
comprising the polymer and optional additional synthetic or natural metal,
plastic, carbon or glass fibre mesh, scrim, rod or like reinforcing for medical or
surgical insertion, for insertion as a solid monolith into bone or tissue, as fillers
or cements for wet insertion into bone or teeth or as solid aggregates or
monoliths for orthopaedic implants such as pins, or dental implants such as
crowns etc.
The invention is now illustrated in non limiting manner with reference to the
following examples and Figures wherein
Figure 1 A - D shows scanning electron micrograph images of composites
fabricated by the process of WO 98/51347 (Howdle et al) employed in the
present invention; in Images A and B of an internal fracture surface of a
monolith composite of calcium hydroxyapatite (40 wt%) and PLGA (60 wt%),
at low magnification the distribution of calcium hydroxyapatite throughout the
matrix and the production of pores is evident, at higher magnification the
intimate mixing of guest particles and polymer is observed; in image C catalase
(50% wt) is shown incorporated into a PLGA matrix (50%), micron scale pores

in the polymer and the distinctive protein particle morphology are evident; in
image D a high surface area microparticle composite (fluorescein (sodium salt)
(8 wt%) and polycaprolactone (92 wt%)) are observed produced by direct
atomisation, ie after fast depressurisation through an orifice.
Figures 2 and 3 show scanning electron micrograph images and corresponding
mercury porosimetry data for PLA composites fabricated by the process of WO
98/51347 (Howdle et at) employed in the present invention with control of
PLA pore structure by changing de-pressurisation conditions; in Figure 2 the
image shows presence of a small population of large pores obtained by de-
pressurisation over a 2-hour period ("slow"); in Figure 3 the image shows an
increase in porosity and a more heterogeneous distribution obtained by de-
pressurisation over a 2-minute period ("fast"); data obtained by mercury
porosimetry demonstrate that fine control over micropore distribution is
achieved by changing only the de-pressurisation rate, with "slow"
depressurisation creating pores in the 50 to 500 nm range, whilst "fast"
depressurisation is strikingly different and creates pores in the 500 nm to 5 μm
range
Figure 4 shows a schematic of the method of the invention in which fluorescent
protein solution is adsorbed onto the polymer surface, the protein is confined to
the surface and does not penetrate the bulk; confocal cross section through the
polymer from the top surface shows protein confined to the edge and outer
pores of the PLA scaffold; thereafter the polymer: protein complex is plasticised
in CO2, the protein is shown distributed throughout the sample, and the
resulting fluorescence is homogeneous with the protein redistributed from the
surface to the bulk of the polymer

Figure 5 shows recovery of protein activity after double processing in CO2
Figure 6 shows protein release with time for the composite of Figure 4 and
comparative composite not according to the invention
Methods and Materials
Cell culture
Bone marrow samples (16 patients in total: 11 females and 5 males aged 14-83,
with a mean age of 63.8 years) were obtained from patients undergoing routine
total hip replacement surgery. Only tissue, which would have been discarded,
was used with ethical approval. Human bone marrow cells were cultured on
poly(-lactic acid) porous scaffolds encapsulated with and without recombinant
human BMP-2 or PLA scaffolds adsorbed with rhBMP-2. In vitro assays
included human bone marrow cells with or without addition of recombinant
human BMP-2 (50ng/ml) in basal (10% aMEM) and osteogenic conditions
(10% aMEM supplemented with 100μg/ml ascorbate and 10nM
dexamethasone).
Chorioallantoic membrane assay
Fertilised eggs were incubated for 10-18 days using a Multihatch automatic
incubator (Brinsea Products, Sandford, UK) at 37°C in a humidified
atmosphere. Chick femurs were excised from day 18 chick embryos and a
wedge-shaped segmental defect created in the middle of the femur, into which
the scaffold construct was placed to fill the defect site. Chick bone and scaffolds
(29 samples) were placed directly onto the CAM of 10-day-old eggs (through
a 1cm2 square section cut into the shell) and incubation continued for a further
7 days. The femoral/scaffold explant was then placed onto the CAM and
incubation, at 37°C, continued for a further 7 days. Explants were then

harvested and the chick embryo killed by decapitation. Prior to histochemical
analysis, scaffold and explant samples were then fixed in 95% ethanol,
processed to paraffin wax and 5μm sections prepared for histology.
Example 1 -Preparation of Polymer Material
Poly(DL-lactic acid) (Alkermes Medisorb, low I.V. Mw=85 kD, polydispersity
- 1.4) was ground to a fine grain size powder in a pestle and mortar.
Alternatively, particles were produced by forcing the poly(DL-lactic acid) out
of a vessel pressurized with CO2 through an orifice. The particles were
retrieved from a cyclone collector, the CO2 may be repressurised and recycled.
The methodology is based on the antisolvent technique of particle generation
from supercritical suspension (PGSS).
The polymer may also be prepared as a highly porous monolith using
supercritical fluid processing. In this case porous scaffolds were prepared in
moulds prepared from 48-well tissue culture plates (Costar, LISA). 12x100mg
(±lmg) PLA were weighed out into the wells, and the mould was sealed inside
the autoclave. The autoclave was heated to 35°C before filling with CO2 over
a period of 30 minutes to a pressure of 207 Bar. This long filling time
minimised the potentially detrimental effects of excessive Joule-Thompson
heating on the biologically active substrate as the system was pressurised. The
plasticising CO2-polymer mixture was allowed to equilibrate for 20 minutes
before venting to atmospheric pressure over 8 minutes. The pressure was
controlled throughout the preparation using a JASCO BP-1580-81
programmable backpressure regulator. The autoclave temperature remained

below 38°C throughout the filling step, and the flow rate of CO2 during the
equilibration step was 12cm3min-1. After the CO2 processing, the mould
containing the foamed polymer was removed from the autoclave and the
residual gas allowed to escape for 2 hours.
Example 2 - Addition of the Biological Material - protein
The protein, in this example avidin tagged with the fluorescent molecule
rhodamine (Sigma), was dissolved in distilled water to give solutions at a
concentration of 1 microgram and 10 microgram per ml in water). The liquid
may alternatively be chosen from any liquid that dissolves the biological
molecule but does not dissolve the polymer. 0.5cm3 aliquots of protein solution
were pipetted onto approx 250mg samples of polymer material and remained
in contact with the samples for a period of between 1 sec and 48 hours. During
this exposure, a freeze drying process was used to remove the liquid. We have
freeze-dried a range of avidin-rhodamine and ribonuclease solutions (1
microgram - 250 mg/ml) onto both porous scaffolds and polymer powders for
periods of up to 48 hours. Control scaffolds without any protein addition were
prepared.
Confocal fluorescence microscopy of this material confirmed that the avidin
rhodamine was confined to the surface of the polymer material and was not
distributed with the solid mass of the polymer (Figure 4).
Example 3 -Re-distribution of the biological material - protein

One scaffold from each protein concentration sample from Example 2, was
removed from the well to act as control. The remaining examples were placed
into a high pressure autoclave and heated to 35°C, replasticised in CO2 using
the same procedure as Example 2 above. Figure 4 shows a schematic of the
plasticising process. Confocal fluorescence microscopy of this re-processed
material showed that the avidin rhodamine was re-distributed within the bulk
of the polymer (Figure 4). Confocal microscopy was performed using a Leica
TCS4D system with a Leica DMRBE upright fluorescence microscope and an
argon-krypton laser. The red fluorescence of TRITC Avidin-Rhodamine was
excited with the 568 nm laser line.
Example 4 - Addition of biological material - enzyme
To prove that the activity of biological material was unaffected by this
treatment, 100 microlitres of 250 mg/ml of the enzyme ribonuclease A (Sigma)
was adsorbed onto 8 batches of 100 mg poly(DL-lactic acid) powder using the
method of the above Examples and freeze-dried for 48-hours.
Example 5 - Redistribution of biological material - enzyme
The powder of Example 4 was processed using the conditions in Example 3 to
produce polymer foam composites.
Example 6 — Evidence for Retention of Activity
The ribonuclease enzyme was released from the foams obtained in Example 5
in a Tris buffer (pH 7.13) at physiological temperatures. Using a specific

ribonuclease substrate, cytidine-2':3'-monophospate, the recovery of activity
was monitored by the conversion of the substrate to a form that could be
detected by a UV spectrophotometer (Table 1). Full biological activity of the
protein was retained.
Results
Figure 4 shows a schematic of the supercritical fluid process. Concentration
profiles of the fluorescent avidin-rhodamine complex are shown after the
freeze-drying step and after plasticising CO2 reprocessing. Following the initial
freeze-drying, fluorescence is localised at the exposed surfaces of the scaffold,
i.e. the top surface and the walls of pores. After CO2 reprocessing, the complex
is distributed throughout the sample, and the resulting fluorescence is
homogeneous.
The schematic is supported by data from confocal microscopy. On the left are
eight images that follow the edge of a pore in a sample from the top surface to
a depth of 77.4μm after the initial freeze-drying step. The images show a
decreasing intensity of fluorescence as the distance from the top surface
increases, except for a narrow region localised at the edge of the pore.
The series on the right depicts a sample that has been reprocessed in plasticising
CO2. Here again, the series follows the edge of a pore to a depth of 82.5μm
below the surface. In contrast to the unprocessed scaffold, fluorescence is
observed throughout the scaffold with appreciable intensity seen both in the
bulk and at the pores' surface.

Ribonuclease activity was measured after release into Tris buffer solution from
scaffolds after processing in scCO2 (Figure 5). The rate of reaction of

cytidine-2', 3'-monophosphate to cytidine-3 '-phosphate was measured by the
change in absorbance at 284 nm. The black circles (samples) represent the
activity of the enzyme compared to the standards (open circles). The mean
recovery of activity was 100.8% (±9.8%) indicating that enzyme activity is
retained throughout the process. The correlation between sample and standard
activity is high (R2 = 0.9959;.
Example 7 - Evidence of Controlled Release
Figure 6 displays the protein release behaviour from Example 6 as a function
of time. Where the protein has been dried onto the polymer scaffold without a

second plasticising CO2 processing step, the protein is released very quickly
with nothing remaining after two days (Black triangles). In samples which have
been subjected to the SCF reprocessing step, the release is far more protracted.
After an initial "burst" phase (0-1 days), the rate of release stabilises for
approximately three weeks before degradation of the polymer matrix allows the
protein to escape. The profile then follows a rectilinear relationship until the
exhaustion of the protein after approximately 80 days.
Example 8 - Addition of Biological Material - Growth Factor
Scaffold generation and rhBMP-2 encapsulation
Polymer obtained as in Example 1 was loaded with the Growth Factor
recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-2 (rhBMP-2). Poly(DL-lactic
acid) and rhBMP-2 (100ng/mg PLA) were mixed together using a combination
of conventional solution and supercritical carbon dioxide processing to generate
porous (50-200μm) scaffolds (23). Briefly, .Recombinant BMP-2 was adsorbed
onto poly(D,L-lactic acid) powder (Alkermes Inc., USA; low inherent viscosity,
Mw 84 kDa, polydispersity = 1.4) at a concentration of 100ng/mg polymer. The
polymer:protein mixture was processed using a supercritical carbon dioxide
pressurized to 207bar and heated to 35°C for 20 minutes in a high pressure
vessel. Upon depressurization, the protein is encapsulated within the polymer
and pores are formed in the polymer matrix by the escape of the carbon dioxide
gas. Functionally active recombinant human BMP-2 was derived from E.Coli,
at greater than 98% purity in a largely homogenous form.. In this procedure, the
efficient processing of the liquefied polymer in scCO2 at near ambient
temperatures results in a homogeneous distribution of the bioactive factor
throughout the polymer matrix. These mild processing conditions allow the
processing of growth factors that are heat or solvent sensitive without further

degradation or damaging their biological activity.
Example 9 - Cell growth in PLA
Human bone marrow cell/ PLA constructs were cultured in 10% FCS aMEM
supplemented with osteogenic medium containing 5 raM inorganic
phosphate for the final 48 hours of the culture period and mineralization was
detected by von Kossa staining.
Histochemistry and immunocytochemistry
Prior to histochemical analysis, PLA scaffold samples were fixed with 4%
Paraformaldehyde or 95% ethanol, dependent on the staining protocol and, as
appropriate, processed to paraffin wax and 5μm sections prepared. Negative
controls were included in all studies, i) Alkaline phosphatase activity: Cultures
stained using the Sigma alkaline phosphatase kit (no.85) according to the
manufacturer's instructions; ii) Alcian blue/Sirius red: Samples were stained
using Weigert's haematoxylin, 0.5% alcian blue (in 1% acetic acid) and sirius
red (in saturated Picric acid).iii) Toluidine Blue and Von Kossa Staining:
Samples were stained with 1% AgN03 under UV light for 20 minutes until
black deposits were visible and after air drying, slides were counterstained with
toluidine blue.
C2C12 alkaline phosphatase assay
BMP-2 has the ability to induce C2C12 promyoblast differentiation into the
osteoblast lineage
(33,34,35).
After encapsulation of 0.01% (w/w) rhBMP-2
within PLA scaffolds, the bioactivity of rhBMP-2 released from the polymer
was determined using C2C12 cells. Briefly, human bone marrow stromal cells
were cultured in the presence or absence of rhBMP-2 encapsulated PLA

scaffold, or passaged onto rhBMP-2 encapsulated PLA scaffold or PLA scaffold
alone in 10% FCS DMEM at 37°C and 5% CO2 for three days. Samples were
fixed in ethanol and stained for alkaline phosphatase.
Bioactivity of rhBMP-2 encapsulated PLA scaffolds
After encapsulation of rhBMP-2 within PLA scaffolds (100ng/mg PLA), the
bioactivity of rhBMP-2 released from PLA scaffolds was determined using
induction of the C2C12 promyoblast cell line into the osteogenic lineage as
detected by alkaline phosphatase expression. Alkaline phosphatase-positive
cells were observed following culture of C2C12 cells in presence of or on
rhBMP-2 encapsulated PLA scaffolds (Fig. 1A, C). No induction of alkaline
phosphatase-positive cells was observed using blank scaffolds (Fig. 1B, D). As
expected, rhBMP-2 (50ng/ml) adsorbed on PLA promoted human bone marrow
stromal cell adhesion, spreading, proliferation, and differentiation on PLA
porous scaffold in vitro as observed by SEM, confocal microscopy and
expression of type I collagen histochemistry (data not shown).
Human osteoprogenitor growth on rhBMP-2 encapsulated scaffolds
Following demonstration of the ability of using rhBMP-2 encapsulated PLA
scaffold to stimulate differentiation of C2C12 promyoblast towards the
osteoblast lineage, the potential of rhBMP-2 scaffolds to induce differentiation
and mineralisation of human bone marrow stromal cells was examined in vitro
and in vivo.
i) CAM culture
Culture of human osteoprogenitors on rhBMP-2 encapsulated PLA scaffolds on
the chick chorioallantoic membrane model showed that encapsulated rhBMP-2
stimulated human bone marrow stromal cell growth and differentiation in the

PLA scaffolds (Fig. 2B-D). Extensive angiogenesis, as evidenced by new blood
vessel growth, was observed on the scaffold/cell constructs from the CAM to
the implanted construct over a period of 7 days (Fig. 2A). New cartilage and
bone were observed within the chick bone defect as detected by alcian blue and
sirius red staining ( Fig 2B, C) and the use of polarized light microscopy to
demonstrate collagen birefringence within the newly formed matrix (Fig. 2D).
Subcutaneous implantation
Confluent primary human bone marrow cells were trypsinised and seeded
(2x105 cells/sample in serum free aMEM) onto PLA scaffolds adsorbed with
rhBMP-2 or rhBMP-2 encapsulated PLA scaffolds for 15 hours. Blank (PLA
alone) scaffolds were set up in the absence of cells. After 15 hours, constructs
were placed in osteogenic media for a further 3 days, prior to subcutaneous
implantation into MF1-nu/nu mice (20-24g, 4-5 weeks old) as previously
described(36). After 4-6 weeks, the mice were killed and specimens were
collected and fixed in 95% ethanol for histochemical analysis.
ii) Subcutaneous implant model
Primary human bone marrow cells were seeded onto PLA scaffolds
encapsulated with rhBMP-2 and subcutaneous implanted (8 samples) in nude
mice for 6 weeks (PLA alone served as a negative control). Poor cell growth
and negligible bone matrix synthesis was observed on PLA scaffolds alone (in
the absence of rhBMP-2) implanted in nude mice with only fibrous tissue and
adipose tissue observed (Fig. 3E). In contrast, rhBMP-2 encapsulated scaffolds
promoted human bone marrow stromal cell adhesion, proliferation,
differentiation with extensive evidence of new bone matrix deposition as

detected by Alcian blue/Sirius red staining for cartilage and bone respectively
(Fig. 3 A and 3B). Furthermore, evidence of organised new woven bone within
the encapsulated constructs was confirmed by birefringence of collagen using
polarized microscopy (Fig 3B). The efficacy of rhIBMP-2 to induce bone
formation was confirmed by HBM cell in-growfh and bone matrix formation
into rhBMP-2 adsorbed PLA scaffolds as detected by Alcian blue and Sirius red
staining (Fig 3C) and (Fig 3D) Type I collagen staining. Only fibrous tissue and
fat tissue were observed in blank (PLA alone) scaffolds (Fig 3E).
Intra-peritoneal implantation
The diffusion chamber (130ΜL capacity) model provides an enclosed
environment within a host animal to study the osteogenic capacity of skeletally
derived cell populations, which resolves the problems of host versus donor bone
tissue generation. Cells were recovered by collagenase (Clostridium
histolyticum, type IV; 25U/ml) and trypsin/EDTA digestion. Human bone
marrow cells were sealed in diffusion chambers (2 x 106 cells/chamber)
together with PLA porous scaffold encapsulated or adsorbed with or without
rhBMP-2. Chambers were implanted intra-peritoneally in MF1-nu/nu mice and
after 10 weeks the mice were killed, chambers were removed and examined by
X-ray analysis prior to fixation in 95% ethanol at 4°C. Polymer samples were
processed undecalcified and sectioned at 5 μm and stained for toluidine blue,
type I collagen, osteocalcin and mineralisation by von Kossa.
iii) Diffusion chamber model
Recombinant human BMP-2 encapsulated PLA scaffolds seeded with human
osteoprogenitor cells, showed morphologic evidence of new bone and cartilage
matrix formation as examined by Alcian blue and Sirius red staining (Fig. 3G,

3J) and by X-ray analysis (Fig. 31) after 10 weeks implantation within diffusion
chambers. Metachromatic staining was observed using toluidine blue and
collagen deposition and new matrix synthesis was confirmed by birefringence
microscopy (Fig. 3H). Cartilage formation could be observed within rhBMP-2
encapsulated PL A scaffolds confirming penetration of human osteoprogenitors
through the scaffold constructs (Fig. 3J). No bone formation was observed on
cell/PLA scaffold constructs alone (Fig. 3F).
Further aspects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the
foregoing.

WE CLAIM :
1. A process for the preparation of a polymer composite comprising internally
distributed deposition matter wherein the process comprises:
providing a deposit of deposition matter at the surface of a solid state polymer
substrate by fluid phase deposition of discrete particles or dissolved deposition
matter by immersion or spraying of solid state polymer substrate with a solution,
dispersion or suspension of deposition matter.
drying by freezing, evaporation, heating or blotting whereby the deposition
matter adsorbs from liquid phase on to the polymer surface and forms an adsorption
layer of deposition matter which is intact to solvent and impact effects
contacting the surface deposited polymer with a plasticising fluid or a mixture
of plasticising fluids under plasticising conditions to plasticise ana/or swell the
polymer and internally distribute deposition matter, and
releasing the plasticising fluid or fluids to obtain polymer composite.
2. A process as claimed in claim 1, wherein deposition matter is present,
presented as concentration of deposition matter on polymer, in the range 1x101 to
1x10 ng/mg, or of the order of picograms or nanograms per 5g polymer, or 1 x 10-
12 to 1 x 10-9wt%.
3. A process for the preparation of a polymer composite comprising internally
distributed deposition matter wherein the process comprises:
providing a deposit of deposition matter at the surface of a solid state polymer
substrate by fluid phase deposition of discrete particles or dissolved deposition
matter by immersion or spraying of solid state polymer substrate with a solution,
dispersion or suspension of deposition matter,
drying by freezing, evaporation, heating or blotting or by solid phase
deposition by powder coating, dusting, rolling or adhering contacting the surface
deposited polymer with a plasticising fluid or a mixture of plasticising fluids under
plasticising conditions to plasticise and/or swell the polymer and internally distribute
deposition matter, and

releasing the plasticising fluid or fluids to obtain polymer composite
wherein deposition matter is present, presented as concentration of
deposition matter on polymer, in the range 1x101 to 1x103 ng/mg, or of the order of
picograms or nanograms per 5g polymer, or 1 x 10 -12 to 1 x 10 -9 wt%.
4. A process as claimed in any of claims 1 to 3, which comprises providing a
deposit at the surface of a high surface area polymer substrate.
5. Process as claimed in any of claims 1 to 4, wherein the polymer substrate
comprises a powder bed or a high porosity matrix.
6. A process as claimed in any of claims 1 to 5, wherein a deposit comprises a
deposition layer of deposition matter on any internal and external exposed surfaces
of the polymer substrate, including any exposed surface pores; over the entire
surface area or only part or parts thereof.
7. A process as claimed in any of claims 1 to 6 wherein the solid state polymer
substrate is obtained by contacting polymer with plasticising fluid or a mixture of
plasticising fluids under plasticising conditions to plasticise the polymer, and
releasing the fluid in manner to obtain a solid state substrate polymer.
8. A process as claimed in any of claims 1 to 7 carried out in the absence of
additional solvent capable of dissolving the deposition matter.
9. A process as claimed in any of claims 1 to 8, wherein immersion is for a time
of the order 1 second up to 48 hours.
10. A process as claimed in any of claims 1 to 9, wherein drying is for a time up to
48 hours.

11. A process as claimed in any of claims 1 to 10. wherein plasticising conditions
comprise a temperature in the range -200°C to +500°C.
12. A process as claimed in any of claims 1 to 11, wherein plasticising conditions
comprise a pressure from in excess of 1 bar to 10000 bar.
13. A process as claimed in any of claims 1 to 12. wherein the process is carried
out for a contact time of surface deposited polymer and plasticising fluid of 20
milliseconds up to 5 minutes.
14. A process as claimed in any of claims 1 to 13, which is carried out without
blending.
15. A process as claimed in any of claims 1 to 14, wherein plasticising fluid is
selected from carbon dioxide, di-nitrogen oxide, carbon disulphide, aliphatic C2-10
hydrocarbons such as ethane, propane, butane, pentane, hexane. ethylene, and
halogenated derivatives thereof such as for example carbon tetrafluoride or chloride
and carbon monochloride trifluoride, and fluoroform or chloroform, C6-10 aromatics
such as benzene, toluene and xylene, C1-3 alcohols such as methanol and ethanol,
sulphur halides such as sulphur hexafluoride, ammonia, xenon, krypton, and
mixtures thereof.
16. A process as claimed in any of claims 1 to 15. wherein deposition material is
selected from (pharmaceutical) drugs and veterinary products; agrochemicals as
pest and plant growth control agents; human and animal health products: human
and animal growth promoting, structural, or cosmetic products including products
intended for growth or repair or modelling of the skeleton, organs, dental structure;
absorbent biodeposition materials for poisons, toxins.

17. A process as claimed in any of claims 1 to 16, wherein deposition matter
alternatively or additionally comprises function enhancing components, including
naturally occurring or synthetic or otherwise modified growth promoters,
biocompatibilisers, vitamins, proteins, glycoproteins, enzymes, nucleic acid,
carbohydrates, minerals, nutrients, steroids, ceramics and the like and functioning
matter such as spores, viruses, mammalian, plant and bacterial cells.
18. Process as claimed in any of claims 1 to 17, wherein polymer is selected
from: polyesters including poly(lactic acid), poly(glycolic acid), copolymers of lactic
and glycolic acid, copolymers of lactic and glycolic acid with poly(ethylene glycol),
poly(e-caprolactone), poly(3-hydroxybutyrate), poly(p-dioxanone), poly(propylene
fumarate); poly (ortho esters); polyanhydrides; Poly(amino acids); polyacetals;
polyketals; polyorthoesters; Poiyphosphazenes; azo polymers; synthetic Non-
biodegradable Polymers selected from: Vinyl polymers including polyethylene, poly
(ethylene-co-vinyl acetate), polypropylene, polyvinyl chloride), polyvinyl acetate),
polyvinyl alcohol) and copolymers of vinyl alcohol and vinyl acetate, poly(acrylic
acid) poly(methacrylic acid), polyacrylamides, polymethacrylamides, polyacrylates,
Poly(ethylene glycol), Poly(dimethyl siloxane), Polyurethanes, Polycarbonates,
Polystyrene and derivatives; and Natural Polymers selected from carbohydrates,
polypeptides and proteins.
19. A polymer composite when obtained by the process of any of claims 1 to 19.

A process for the preparation of a polymer composite comprising internally distributed deposition matter wherein
the process comprises providing a deposit of deposition matter at the surface of a solid stale polymer substrate, contacting the surface
deposited polymer with a plasticising fluid or a mixture of plasticising fluids under plasticising conditions to plasticise and/or swell
the polymer and internally distribute deposition matter, and releasing the plasticising fluid or fluids to obtain polymer composite.;
A polymer composite comprising a porous or non porcus polymer throughout which particulate deposition matter as hereinbefore
defined is distributed with desired uniformity, preferably with high uniformity in excess of 80 % for example in excess of 98 %; A
scaffold comprising a polymer composite having internally distributed deposition matter, and use of the composite as a support or
scaflold lor drug delivery, for use in bioremediation, as a biocatalyst or biobarrier for human or animal or plant matter, for use as
a structural component, for example comprising the polymer and optional additional synthelic or natural metal, plastic, carbon or
glass fibre mesh, scrim, rod or like reinforcing for medical or surgical insertion, for insertion as a solid monolith into bone or tissue,
as fillers or cements for wet insertion into bone or teen or as solid aggregates or monoliths for orthopaedic implants such as pins,
or dental implants such as crowns etc.

Documents:

1352-KOLNP-2004-CORRESPONDENCE 1.1.pdf

1352-KOLNP-2004-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

1352-KOLNP-2004-FORM 27-1.1.pdf

1352-KOLNP-2004-FORM 27.pdf

1352-KOLNP-2004-FORM-27.pdf

1352-kolnp-2004-granted-abstract.pdf

1352-kolnp-2004-granted-assignment.pdf

1352-kolnp-2004-granted-claims.pdf

1352-kolnp-2004-granted-correspondence.pdf

1352-kolnp-2004-granted-description (complete).pdf

1352-kolnp-2004-granted-drawings.pdf

1352-kolnp-2004-granted-examination report.pdf

1352-kolnp-2004-granted-form 1.pdf

1352-kolnp-2004-granted-form 18.pdf

1352-kolnp-2004-granted-form 3.pdf

1352-kolnp-2004-granted-form 5.pdf

1352-kolnp-2004-granted-pa.pdf

1352-kolnp-2004-granted-reply to examination report.pdf

1352-kolnp-2004-granted-specification.pdf

1352-KOLNP-2004-OTHERS.pdf


Patent Number 226729
Indian Patent Application Number 1352/KOLNP/2004
PG Journal Number 52/2008
Publication Date 26-Dec-2008
Grant Date 24-Dec-2008
Date of Filing 13-Sep-2004
Name of Patentee UNIVERSITY OF NOTTINGHAM
Applicant Address UNIVERSITY PARK, NOTTINGHAM NG7 2RD
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 WHITAKER MARTIN JAMES DEPARTMENT OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES, UNIVERSITY OF NOTTINGHAM, NOTTINGHAM NG7 2RD
2 HOWDLE STEVEN MELVYN UNIVERSITY OF NOTTINGHAM, DEPATMENT OF CHEMISTRY, UNIVERSITY PARK, NOTTINGHAM NG7 2RD
3 SHAKESHEFF KEVIN MORRIS DEPARTMENT OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES, UNIVERSITY OF NOTTINGHAM, NOTTINGHAM NG7 2RD
4 WATSON MICHAEL STEVEN SCHOOL OF CHEMISTRY UNIVERSITY OF NOTTINGHAM, NOTTINGHAM NG7 2RD
PCT International Classification Number C08J 3/20
PCT International Application Number PCT/GB03/01015
PCT International Filing date 2003-03-10
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 0205868.3 2002-03-13 U.K.