
Nature Podcast Insulin cream offers needle-free option for diabetes
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Nov 19, 2025 Benjamin Thompson, a science reporter, delves into a groundbreaking development in diabetes care: a polymer cream that delivers insulin through the skin, eliminating the need for needles. He discusses how this innovative approach overcomes the skin's natural barriers, allowing for effective insulin delivery in animal models. The conversation highlights the polymer's pH-triggered action, potential for other drug deliveries, and ongoing safety evaluations. Additionally, the podcast explores fascinating insights into how our brains process familiar and unfamiliar languages.
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pH‑Switching Polymer Enables Transdermal Insulin
- Researchers developed a pH-responsive polymer (OP) that changes charge to cross both skin layers without damage.
- OP carries insulin (OPI) into circulation and reduced blood glucose in mice and mini pigs nearly as fast as injections.
Exploit Skin pH Gradients For Delivery
- Design delivery carriers to exploit natural skin gradients like surface acidity to transport large molecules without puncturing skin.
- Use pH-responsive chemistry to bind outer lipids then release in neutral inner layers.
Drug Distribution Mirrors Natural Insulin Targets
- OPI accumulated in skeletal muscle, fat and liver, the key glucose-uptake tissues, and normalized blood glucose for at least 12 hours in animals.
- The pig response was slower than mice, likely due to thicker fat under pig skin.
