Researchers Develop Contact Lenses that Change Color as Drugs Released

A team of researchers in China has developed drug-delivering contact lenses that could self-report the drug release process by color change. The team’s work appears in the journal ACS Applied Materials Interfaces.

Color-changing contact lenses could help doctors determine whether drugs are being delivered to the intended treatment site. Image credit: American Chemical Society.

Color-changing contact lenses could help doctors determine whether drugs are being delivered to the intended treatment site. Image credit: American Chemical Society.

Eyes are adept at keeping things out. When something ventures into or toward an eye, the lids blink and tears start rapidly flowing to avoid infection and damage from foreign objects.

These processes are usually helpful, but they can hinder the uptake of much-needed medications.

Studies suggest that less than 5% of drugs in eye drops and ointments are absorbed, and much of the absorbed medication ends up in the bloodstream instead of the eye, causing side effects.

Contact lenses may be a more effective way to deliver drugs directly to the eye, but real-time monitoring of drug release is still a challenge.

So researchers from the China Pharmaceutical University and the Southeast University, both in Nanjing, China, sought to create a drug-delivering contact lens that would change color as the medication is released into the eye.

They fabricated a color-sensitive contact lens using molecular imprinting, a technique that creates molecular cavities in a polymer structure that match the size and shape of a specific compound, such as a medicine.

In lab experiments, the molecularly imprinted contact lenses were loaded with timolol, a drug used to treat glaucoma.

Then, the scientists exposed the lenses to a solution of artificial tears, which was used as a stand-in for the eye.

As the drug was released from the contacts, the architecture of the molecules near the drug changed, which also changed the color in the iris area of the lenses. No dye was involved in the process, reducing possible side effects.

The researchers could see this shift with the naked eye and with a fiber optic spectrometer.

“This new lens could control and indicate the sustained release of many ophthalmic drugs,” they said.

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Jingzhe Deng et al. 2018. Self-Reporting Colorimetric Analysis of Drug Release by Molecular Imprinted Structural Color Contact Lens. ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces 10 (40): 34611-34617; doi: 10.1021/acsami.8b11655

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