Background of the Invention
[0001] Contact lenses have been used commercially to improve vision since at least the 1950s.
The first contact lenses were made of hard materials and as such were somewhat uncomfortable
to users. Modem soft contact lenses are made of softer materials, typically hydrogels.
Recently soft contact lenses made from silicone hydrogels have been introduced. Silicone
hydrogel are water-swollen polymer networks that have high oxygen permeability. These
lenses provide a good level of comfort to many lens wearers, but there are some users
who experience discomfort and excessive ocular deposits leading to reduced visual
acuity when using these lenses. This discomfort and deposits has been attributed to
the hydrophobic character of the surfaces of lenses and the interaction of those surfaces
with the protein, lipids and mucin and the hydrophilic surface of the eye.
[0002] Others have tried to alleviate this problem by coating the surface of silicone hydrogel
contact lenses with hydrophilic coatings, such as plasma coatings
[0003] Cyclic polyamides, such as polyvinylpyrollidone have been incorporated into both
conventional and silicone containing hydrogel formulations and contact lenses. Poly(meth)acrylamide
and N-substituted poly(meth)acrylamides have been disclosed to be hydrophilic IPN
agents which may be incorporated into conventional (non-silicone containing) hydrogels.
[0004] Modifying the surface of a polymeric article by adding polymerizable surfactants
to a monomer mix used to form the article has also been disclosed. However, lasting
in vivo improvements in wettability and reductions in surface deposits are not likely.
[0005] Polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) or poly-2-ethyl-2-oxazoline have been added to a hydrogel
forming composition to form an interpenetrating network which shows a low degree of
surface friction, a low dehydration rate and a high degree of biodeposit resistance.
However, the hydrogel formulations disclosed are conventional hydrogels and there
is no disclosure on how to incorporate hydrophobic components, such as siloxane monomers,
without causing insolubility of the hydrogel-forming composition.
[0006] While it may be possible to incorporate high molecular weight polymers as internal
wetting agents into silicone hydrogel lenses, such polymers can be difficult to solubilize
in reaction mixtures which contain silicones.
[0007] Therefore it would be advantageous to find additional high molecular weight hydrophilic
polymers which may be incorporated into a lens formulation to improve wettability
of the lens without a surface treatment.
[0008] US 5,496,871 discloses contact lenses produced from mixtures of fumarate or fumaramide monomers
and a hydrophilic monomer. These devices comprise silicone hydrogels comprising hydrophilic
groups such as amide groups, however, these groups are covalently bonded to the silicone
hydrogel.
[0009] US 5,486,579 discloses contact lenses produced from mixtures of a silicone-containing monomer,
at least one acrylic-containing hydrophilic monomer, and at least one vinyl-containing
hydrophilic monomer. These devices comprise silicone hydrogels comprising hydrophilic
groups such as amide groups, however, these groups are covalently bonded to the silicone
hydrogel.
Summary of the Invention
[0010] The present invention is as defined by the claims, and relates to a contact lens
made from a silicone hydrogel comprising a lens polymer having entangled therein at
least one acyclic polyamide comprising repeating units of Formula I.
Wherein X is a direct bond,

wherein R3 is a C1 to C3 alkyl group;
R1 is selected from H, straight or branched, substituted or unsubstituted C1 to C4 alkyl
groups,
R2 is selected from H, straight or branched, substituted or unsubstituted C1 to C4
alkyl groups, amino groups having up to two carbons, amide groups having up to four
carbon atoms and alkoxy groups having up to two carbons and wherein the number of
carbon atoms in R1 and R2 taken together is 8 or less.
[0011] The present invention further relates to silicone hydrogels formed from a reaction
mixture comprising or consisting essentially of at least one silicone containing component
and at least one acyclic polyamide comprising repeating units of Formula I
Wherein X is a direct bond,

wherein R3 is a C1 to C3 alkyl group;
R1 is selected from H, straight or branched, substituted or unsubstituted C1 to C4 alkyl
groups,
R2 is selected from H, straight or branched, substituted or unsubstituted C1 to C4 alkyl
groups, amino groups having up to two carbons, amide groups having up to four carbon
atoms and alkoxy groups having up to two carbons and wherein the number of carbon
atoms in R1 and R2 taken together is 8 or less, and preferably 6 or less.
Detailed Description of the Invention
[0012] As used herein, a "biomedical device" is any article that is designed to be used
while either in or on mammalian tissues or fluid, and preferably in or on human tissue
or fluids. Examples of these devices include but are not limited to catheters, implants,
stents, and ophthalmic devices such as intraocular lenses and contact lenses. The
preferred biomedical devices are ophthalmic devices, particularly contact lenses,
most particularly contact lenses made from silicone hydrogels.
[0013] As used herein, the terms "lens" and "ophthalmic device" refer to devices that reside
in or on the eye. These devices can provide optical correction, wound care, drug delivery,
diagnostic functionality, cosmetic enhancement or effect or a combination of these
properties. The term lens includes but is not limited to soft contact lenses, hard
contact lenses, intraocular lenses, overlay lenses, ocular inserts, and optical inserts.
[0014] As used herein, the phrase "without a surface treatment" means that the exterior
surfaces of the devices of the present invention are not separately treated to improve
the wettability of the device. Treatments which may be foregone because of the present
invention include, plasma treatments, grafting, coating and the like. However, coatings
which provide properties other than improved wettability, such as, but not limited
to antimicrobial coatings and the application of color or other cosmetic enhancement
may be applied to devices of the present invention.
[0015] As used herein the term "silicone containing compatibilizing component" means reaction
components which contain at least one silicone and at least one hydroxyl group. Such
components have been disclosed in
US. Serial Nos. 10/236,538 and
10/236,762.
[0016] The compositions of the present invention comprise, consist essentially and consist
of at least one silicone containing component and at least one acyclic polyamide.
Acyclic polyamides of the present invention comprise pendant acyclic amide groups
and are capable of association with hydroxyl groups. When the acyclic polyamides are
incorporated into the reactive mixture they have a weight average molecular weight
of at least about 100,000 Daltons, preferably greater than about 150,000; more preferably
between about 150,000 to about 2,000,000 Daltons, more preferably still between about
300,000 to about 1,800,000 Daltons. When the acyclic polyamides are incorporated into
a solution in which a medical device formed from a hydrogel is stored, they have a
weight average molecular weight of at least about 2,500 Daltons, preferably greater
than about 25,000; more preferably between about 100,000 to about 2,000,000 Daltons,
more preferably still between about 150,000 to about 1,800,000 Daltons.
[0018] The acyclic polyamides of the present invention are incorporated into the hydrogel
formulation of this invention without significant covalent bonding to the hydrogel.
The absence of significant covalent bonding means that while a minor degree of covalent
bonding may be present, it is incidental to the retention of the wetting agent in
the hydrogel matrix. Whatever incidental covalent bonding may be present, it would
not by itself be sufficient to retain the wetting agent in the hydrogel matrix. Instead,
the vastly predominating effect keeping the wetting agent associated with the hydrogel
is entrapment. The polymer is "entrapped", according to this specification, when it
is physically retained within a hydrogel matrix. This is done via entanglement of
the polymer chain of the acyclic polyamide within the hydrogel polymer matrix. However,
van der Waals forces, dipole-dipole interactions, electrostatic attraction and hydrogen
bonding can also contribute to this entrapment to a lesser extent.
[0019] The acyclic polyamides may be incorporated into the hydrogel by a variety of methods.
For example, the acyclic polyamide may be added to the reaction mixture such that
the hydrogel polymerizes "around" the acyclic polyamide, forming a semi-interpenetrating
network. Alternatively, the acyclic polyamide may be included in the solution in which
the lens is packaged. The acyclic polyamide permeates into the lens. The packaged
lens may be heat treated to increase the amount of acyclic polyamide which permeates
the lens. Suitable heat treatments, include, but are not limited to conventional heat
sterilization cycles, which include temperatures of about 120°C for times of about
20 minutes. If heat sterilization is not used, the packaged lens may be separately
heat treated.
[0020] Examples of suitable acyclic polyamides include polymers and copolymers comprising
repeating units of Formula I
Wherein X is a direct bond,

wherein R3 is a C1 to C3 alkyl group;
R1 is selected from H, straight or branched, substituted or unsubstituted C1 to C4 alkyl
groups,
R2 is selected from H, straight or branched, substituted or unsubstituted C1 to C4 alkyl
groups, amino groups having up to two carbons, amide groups having up to 4 carbon
atoms and alkoxy groups having up to two carbons and wherein the number of carbon
atoms in R1 and R2 taken together is 8, preferably 6 or less. As used herein substituted alkyl groups
include alkyl groups substituted with an amine, amide, ether or carboxy group.
[0021] In one preferred embodiment R
1 and R
2 are independently selected from H, and substituted or unsubstituted C1 to C2 alkyl
groups and preferably unsubstituted C1 to C2 alkyl groups.
[0022] In another preferred embodiment X is a direct bond, R
1 and R
2 are independently selected from H, substituted or unsubstituted C1 to C2 alkyl groups.
[0023] Preferably the acyclic polyamides of the present invention comprise a majority of
the repeating unit of Formula I, and more preferably at least about 80 mole% of the
repeating unit of Formula I.
[0024] Specific examples of repeating units of Formula I include repeating units derived
from N-vinyl-N-methylacetamide, N-vinylacetamide, N-vinyl-N-methylpropionamide, N-vinyl-N-methyl-2-methylpropionamide,
N-vinyl-2-methylpropionamide, N-vinyl-N,N'-dimethylurea, and the following acyclic
amides:

[0025] Additional repeating units may be formed from monomers selected from N-vinyl amides,
acrylamides, hydroxyalkyl (meth) acrylates, alkyl (meth)acrylates or other hydrophilic
monomers and siloxane substituted acrylates or methacrylates. Specific examples of
monomers which may be used to form acyclic polyamides include as N-vinylpyrrolidone,
N,N-dimethylacrylamide, 2-hydroxyethylmethacrylate, vinyl acetate, acrylonitrile,hydroxypropyl
methacrylate, 2-hydroxyethyl acrylate, methyl methacrylate and butyl methacrylate,
methacryloxypropyl tristrimethylsiloxysilane and the like and mixtures thereof. Preferred
additional repeating units monomers include of N-vinylpyrrolidone, N,N-dimethylacrylamide,
2-hydroxyethylmethacrylate and mixtures thereof.
[0026] In one embodiment the acyclic polyamide is poly(N-vinyl-N-methylacetamide).
[0027] The acyclic polyamides may be used in amounts from about 1 to about 15 weight percent,
more preferably about 3 to about 15 percent, most preferably about 5 to about 12 percent,
all based upon the total of all reactive components.
[0028] In one embodiment, the hydrogels of the present invention further comprise one or
more silicone-containing components and, optionally one or more hydrophilic components.
The silicone-containing and hydrophilic components used to make the polymer of this
invention can be any of the known components used in the prior art to make silicone
hydrogels. These terms silicone-containing component and hydrophilic component are
not mutually exclusive, in that, the silicone-containing component can be somewhat
hydrophilic and the hydrophilic component can comprise some silicone, because the
silicone-containing component can have hydrophilic groups and the hydrophilic components
can have silicone groups.
[0029] Further, silicone-containing component(s) and hydrophilic component(s) can be reacted
prior to polymerization to form a prepolymer which is later polymerized in the presence
of a diluent to form the polymer of this invention. When prepolymers or macromers
are used, it is preferred to polymerize at least one silicone-containing monomer and
at least one hydrophilic monomer in the presence of the diluent, wherein the silicone-containing
monomers and the hydrophilic monomers differ. The term "monomer" used herein refers
to low molecular weight compounds (i.e. typically having number average molecular
weights less than 700) that can be polymerized. Thus, it is understood that the terms
"silicone-containing components" and "hydrophilic components" include monomers, macromonomers
and prepolymers.
[0030] A silicone-containing component is one that contains at least one [-Si-O-Si] group,
in a monomer, macromer or prepolymer. Preferably, the Si and attached O are present
in the silicone-containing component in an amount greater than 20 weight percent,
and more preferably greater than 30 weight percent of the total molecular weight of
the silicone-containing component. Useful silicone-containing components preferably
comprise polymerizable functional groups such as acrylate, methacrylate, acrylamide,
methacrylamide, N-vinyl lactam, N-vinylamide, and styryl functional groups. Examples
of silicone-containing components which are useful in this invention may be found
in
U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,808,178;
4,120,570;
4,136,250;
4,153,641;
4,740,533;
5,034,461 and
5,070,215, and
EP080539. These references disclose many examples of olefinic silicone-containing components.
[0031] Further examples of suitable silicone-containing monomers are polysiloxanylalkyl(meth)acrylic
monomers represented by the following formula:
wherein: R denotes H or lower alkyl; X denotes O or NR4; each R4 independently denotes hydrogen or methyl,
each R1-R3 independently denotes a lower alkyl radical or a phenyl radical, and n is 1 or 3
to 10.
[0032] Examples of these polysiloxanylalkyl (meth)acrylic monomers include
methacryloxypropyl tris(trimethylsiloxy) silane,
methacryloxymethylpentamethyldisiloxane,
methacryloxypropylpentamethyldisiloxane,
methyldi(trimethylsiloxy)methacryloxypropyl silane, and
methyldi(trimethylsiloxy)methacryloxymethyl silane. Methacryloxypropyl tris(trimethylsiloxy)silane
is the most preferred.
[0033] One preferred class of silicone-containing components is a poly(organosiloxane) prepolymer
represented by Formula III:
wherein each A independently denotes an activated unsaturated group, such as an ester
or amide of an acrylic or a methacrylic acid or an alkyl or aryl group (providing
that at least one A comprises an activated unsaturated group capable of undergoing
radical polymerization); each of R5, R6, R7 and R8 are independently selected from the group consisting of a monovalent hydrocarbon
radical or a halogen substituted monovalent hydrocarbon radical having 1 to 18 carbon
atoms which may have ether linkages between carbon atoms;
R9 denotes a divalent hydrocarbon radical having from 1 to 22 carbon atoms, and
m is 0 or an integer greater than or equal to 1, and preferably 5 to 400, and more
preferably 10 to 300. One specific example is α, ω-bismethacryloxypropyl poly-dimethylsiloxane.
Another preferred example is mPDMS (monomethacryloxypropyl terminated mono-n-butyl
terminated polydimethylsiloxane).
[0034] Another useful class of silicone containing components includes silicone-containing
vinyl carbonate or vinyl carbamate monomers of the following formula:

wherein: Y denotes O, S. or NH; R
Si denotes a silicone-containing organic radical; R denotes hydrogen or methyl; d is
1, 2, 3 or 4; and q is 0 or 1. Suitable silicone-containing organic radicals R
Si include the following:

wherein:
Q denotes

wherein p is 1 to 6; R10 denotes an alkyl radical or a fluoroalkyl radical having
1 to 6 carbon atoms; e is 1 to 200; q' is 1, 2, 3 or 4; and s is 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 or
5.
[0035] The silicone-containing vinyl carbonate or vinyl carbamate monomers specifically
include: 1,3-bis[4-(vinyloxycarbonyloxy)but-1-yl]tetramethyl-disiloxane; 3-(vinyloxycarbonylthio)
propyl-[tris (trimethylsiloxy)silane]; 3-[tris(trimethylsiloxy)silyl] propyl allyl
carbamate; 3-[tris(trimethylsiloxy)silyl] propyl vinyl carbamate; trimethylsilylethyl
vinyl carbonate; trimethylsilylmethyl vinyl carbonate, and

[0036] Another class of silicone-containing components includes polyurethane compounds of
the following formulae:
Formulae V-VII
[0037]
(*D*A*D*G)a *D*D*E1;
E(*D*G*D*A)a *D*G*D*E1 or;
E(*D*A*D*G)a *D*A*D*E1
wherein:
D denotes an alkyl diradical, an alkyl cycloalkyl diradical, a cycloalkyl diradical,
an aryl diradical or an alkylaryl diradical having 6 to 30 carbon atoms,
G denotes an alkyl diradical, a cycloalkyl diradical, an alkyl cycloalkyl diradical,
an aryl diradical or an alkylaryl diradical having 1 to 40 carbon atoms and which
may contain ether, thio or amine linkages in the main chain;
* denotes a urethane or ureido linkage;
a is at least 1;
A denotes a divalent polymeric radical of formula:

R11 independently denotes an alkyl or fluoro-substituted alkyl group having 1 to 10 carbon
atoms which may contain ether linkages between carbon atoms; y is at least 1; and
p provides a moiety weight of 400 to 10,000; each of E and E1 independently denotes a polymerizable unsaturated organic radical represented by
formula:

wherein: R12 is hydrogen or methyl; R13 is hydrogen, an alkyl radical having 1 to 6 carbon atoms, or a -CO-Y-R15 radical wherein Y is -O-,Y-S- or -NH-;
R14 is a divalent radical having 1 to 12 carbon atoms; X denotes -CO- or-OCO-; Z denotes
-O- or -NH-; Ar denotes an aromatic radical having 6 to 30 carbon atoms; w is 0 to
6; x is 0 or 1; y is 0 or 1; and z is 0 or 1.
[0038] A preferred silicone-containing component is represented by the following formula:

wherein R
16 is a diradical of a diisocyanate after removal of the isocyanate group, such as the
diradical of isophorone diisocyanate. Another preferred silicone containing macromer
is compound of formula X (in which x + y is a number in the range of 10 to 30) formed
by the reaction of fluoroether, hydroxy-terminated polydimethylsiloxane, isophorone
diisocyanate and isocyanatoethylmethacrylate.

[0039] Other silicone-containing components suitable for use in this invention include those
described is
WO 96/31792 such as macromers containing polysiloxane, polyalkylene ether, diisocyanate, polyfluorinated
hydrocarbon, polyfluorinated ether and polysaccharide groups.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,321,108;
5,387,662 and
5,539,016 describe polysiloxanes with a polar fluorinated graft or side group having a hydrogen
atom attached to a terminal difluoro-substituted carbon atom. Suchpolysiioxanes can
also be used as the silicone monomer in this invention. The hydrophilic siloxanyl
methacrylate monomers and polysiloxane-dimethacrylate macromers described in
US 2004/0192872 can also be used in this invention.
[0040] Hydrophilic components include those which are capable of providing at least about
20% and preferably at least about 25% water content to the resulting lens when combined
with the remaining reactive components. When present, suitable hydrophilic components
may be present in amounts up to about 60 weight %, preferably between about 10 to
about 60 weight%, more preferably between about 15 to about 50 weight % and more preferably
still between about 20 to about 40 weight %, all based upon the weight of all reactive
components. The hydrophilic monomers that may be used to make the polymers of this
invention have at least one polymerizable double bond and at least one hydrophilic
functional group. Examples of polymerizable double bonds include acrylic, methacrylic,
acrylamido, methacrylamido, fumaric, maleic, styryl, isopropenylphenyl, O-vinylcarbonate,
O-vinylcarbamate, allylic, O-vinylacetyl and N-vinyllactam and N-vinylamido double
bonds. Such hydrophilic monomers may themselves be used as crosslinking agents. "Acrylic-type"
or "acrylic-containing" monomers are those monomers containing the acrylic group (CR'H=CRCOX)
wherein R is H or CH
3, R' is H, alkyl or carbonyl, and X is O or N, which are also known to polymerize
readily, such as N,N-dimethylacrylamide (DMA), 2-hydroxyethyl acrylate, glycerol methacrylate,
2-hydroxyethyl methacrylamide, polyethyleneglycol monomethacrylate, methacrylic acid,
acrylic acid and mixtures thereof.
[0041] Hydrophilic vinyl-containing monomers which may be incorporated into the hydrogels
of the present invention include monomers such as N-vinyl lactams (e.g. N-vinyl pyrrolidone
(NVP)), N-vinyl-N-methyl acetamide, N-vinyl-N-ethyl acetamide, N-vinyl-N-ethyl formamide,
N-vinyl formamide, N-2-hydroxyethyl vinyl carbamate, N-carboxy-β-alanine N-vinyl ester,
with NVP being preferred.
[0042] Other hydrophilic monomers that can be employed in the invention include polyoxyethylene
polyols having one or more of the terminal hydroxyl groups replaced with a functional
group containing a polymerizable double bond. Examples include polyethylene glycol
with one or more of the terminal hydroxyl groups replaced with a functional group
containing a polymerizable double bond. Examples include polyethylene glycol reacted
with one or more molar equivalents of an end-capping group such as isocyanatoethyl
methacrylate ("IEM"), methacrylic anhydride, methacryloyl chloride, vinylbenzoyl chloride
to produce a polyethylene polyol having one or more terminal polymerizable olefinic
groups bonded to the polyethylene polyol through linking moieties such as carbamate
or ester groups.
[0043] Still further examples are the hydrophilic vinyl carbonate or vinyl carbamate monomers
disclosed in
U.S. Pat. No.5,070,215, and the hydrophilic oxazolone monomers disclosed in
U.S. Pat. No. 4,190,277. Other suitable hydrophilic monomers will be apparent to one skilled in the art.
[0044] More preferred hydrophilic monomers which may be incorporated into the polymer of
the present invention include hydrophilic monomers such as N,N-dimethyl acrylamide
(DMA), 2-hydroxyethyl acrylate, glycerol methacrylate, 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylamide,
N-vinylpyrrolidone (NVP), N-vinyl-N-methyl acetamide and polyethyleneglycol monomethacrylate.
[0045] Most preferred hydrophilic monomers include DMA, NVP and mixtures thereof.
[0046] When the acyclic polyamides of the present invention are incorporated into a silicone
hydrogel formulation, it may be desirable to include at least one a hydroxyl containing
component to help compatibilize the acyclic polyamide of the present invention and
the silicone containing components. The hydroxyl containing component that may be
used to make the polymers of this invention have at least one polymerizable double
bond and at least one hydrophilic functional group. Examples of polymerizable double
bonds include acrylic, methacrylic, acrylamido, methacrylamido, fumaric, maleic, styryl,
isopropenylphenyl, O-vinylcarbonate, O-vinylcarbamate, allylic, O-vinylacetyl and
N-vinyllactam and N-vinylamido double bonds. The hydroxyl containing component may
also act as a crosslinking agent. In addition the hydroxyl containing component comprises
a hydroxyl group. This hydroxyl group may be a primary, secondary or tertiary alcohol
group, and may be located on an alkyl or aryl group. Examples of hydroxyl containing
monomers that may be used include but are not limited to 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate,
2-hydroxyethyl acrylate, 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylamide, 2-hydroxyethyl acrylamide,
N-(2-hydroxyethyl)-O- vinyl carbamate, 2-hydroxyethyl vinyl carbonate, 2-hydroxypropyl
methacrylate, hydroxyhexyl methacrylate, hydroxyoctyl methacrylate and other hydroxyl
functional monomers as disclosed in
U.S. Patents 5,006,622;
5,070,215;
5,256,751 and
5,311,223. Preferred hydrophilic components include 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate. The hydroxyl
containing component may also include silicone or siloxane functionalities, such as
the hydroxyl-functionalized silicone containing monomers disclosed in
WO03/022321.
[0047] Alternatively the acyclic polyamides may be included in hydrophilic hydrogels which
do not comprise silicone. Generally these hydrogels are made from the hydrophilic
monomers listed above. Commercially available hydrogel formulations include, but are
not limited to etafilcon, polymacon, vifilcon, genfilcon A and lenefilcon A.
[0048] Generally the reactive components are mixed in a diluent to form a reaction mixture.
Suitable diluents are known in the art. For silicone hydrogels suitable diluents are
disclosed in
WO 03/022321.
[0049] Classes of suitable diluents for silicone hydrogel reaction mixtures include alcohols
having 2 to 20 carbons, amides having 10 to 20 carbon atoms derived from primary amines
and carboxylic acids having 8 to 20 carbon atoms. In some embodiments primary and
tertiary alcohols are preferred. Preferred classes include alcohols having 5 to 20
carbons and carboxylic acids having 10 to 20 carbon atoms.
[0050] Specific diluents which may be used include 1 -ethoxy-2-propanol, diisopropylaminoethanol,
isopropanol, 3,7-dimethyl-3-octanol, 1-decanol, 1-dodecanol, 1-octanol, 1-pentanol,
2-pentanol, 1-hexanol, 2-hexanol, 2-octanol, 3-methyl-3-pentanol,
tert-amyl alcohol,
tert-butanol, 2-butanol, 1-butanol, 2-methyl-2-pentanol, 2-propanol, 1-propanol, ethanol,
2-ethyl-1-butanol, (3-acetoxy-2-hydroxypropyloxy)propylbis(trimethylsiloxy)methylsilane,
1-
tert-butoxy-2-propanol, 3,3-dimethyl-2-butanol,
tert-butoxyethanol, 2-octyl-1-dodecanol, decanoic acid, octanoic acid, dodecanoic acid,
2-(diisopropylamino)ethanol mixtures thereof .
[0051] Preferred diluents include 3,7-dimethyl-3-octanol, 1-dodecanol, 1-decanol, 1-octanol,
1-pentanol, 1-hexanol, 2-hexanol, 2-octanol, 3-methyl-3-pentanol, 2-pentanol, t-amyl
alcohol,
tert-butanol, 2-butanol, 1-butanol, 2-methyl-2-pentanol, 2-ethyl-1-butanol, ethanol, 3,3-dimethyl-2-butanol,
2-octyl-1-dodecanol, decanoic acid, octanoic acid, dodecanoic acid, mixtures thereof.
[0052] More preferred diluents include 3,7-dimethyl-3-octanol,1-dodecanol, 1-decanol, 1-octanol,
1-pentanol, 1-hexanol, 2-hexanol, 2-octanol, 1-dodecanol, 3-methyl-3-pentanol, 1-pentanol,
2-pentanol, t-amyl alcohol,
tert-butanol, 2-butanol, 1-butanol, 2-methyl-2-pentanol, 2-ethyl-1-butanol, 3,3-dimethyl-2-butanol,
2-octyl-1-dodecanol, mixtures thereof.
[0053] Suitable diluents for non-silicone containing reaction mixtures include glycerin,
ethylene glycol, ethanol, methanol, ethyl acetate, methylene chloride, polyethylene
glycol, polypropylene glycol, low molecular weight PVP, such as disclosed in
US 4,018,853,
US 4,680,336 and
US 5,039,459, including, but not limited to boric acid esters of dihydric alcohols, combinations
thereof.
[0054] Mixtures of diluents may be used. The diluents may be used in amounts up to about
55% by weight of the total of all components in the reaction mixture. More preferably
the diluent is used in amounts less than about 45% and more preferably in amounts
between about 15 and about 40% by weight of the total of all components in the reaction
mixture.
[0055] It is generally necessary to add one or more cross-linking agents, also referred
to as cross-linking monomers, to the reaction mixture, such as ethylene glycol dimethacrylate
("EGDMA"), trimethylolpropane trimethacrylate ("TMPTMA"), glycerol trimethacrylate,
polyethylene glycol dimethacrylate (wherein the polyethylene glycol preferably has
a molecular weight up to, e.g., about 5000), and other polyacrylate and polymethaçrylate
esters, such as the end-capped polyoxyethylene polyols described above containing
two or more terminal methacrylate moieties. The cross-linking agents are used in the
usual amounts, e.g., from about 0.000415 to about 0.0156 mole per 100 grams of reactive
components in the reaction mixture. (The reactive components are everything in the
reaction mixture except the diluent and any additional processing aids which do not
become part of the structure of the polymer.) Alternatively, if the hydrophilic monomers
and/or the silicone-containing monomers act as the cross-linking agent, the addition
of a crosslinking agent to the reaction mixture is optional. Examples of hydrophilic
monomers which can act as the crosslinking agent and when present do not require the
addition of an additional crosslinking agent to the reaction mixture include polyoxyethylene
polyols described above containing two or more terminal methacrylate moieties.
[0056] An example of a silicone-containing monomer which can act as a crosslinking agent
and, when present, does not require the addition of a crosslinking monomer to the
reaction mixture includes α, ω-bismethaeryloxypropyl polydimethylsiloxane.
[0057] The reaction mixture may contain additional components such as, but not limited to,
UV absorbers, medicinal agents, antimicrobial compounds, reactive tints, pigments,
copolynerizable and nonpolymerizable dyes, release agents and combinations thereof.
[0058] A polymerization catalyst is preferably included in the reaction mixture. The polymerization
initiators includes compounds such as lauryl peroxide, benzoyl peroxide, isopropyl
percarbonate, azobisisobutyronitrile, and the like, that generate free radicals at
moderately elevated temperatures, and photoinitiator systems such as aromatic alpha-hydroxy
ketones, alkoxyoxybenzoins, acetophenones, acylphosphine oxides, bisacylphosphine
oxides, and a tertiary amine plus a diketone, mixtures thereof and the like. Illustrative
examples of photoinitiators are 1-hydroxycyclohexyl phenyl ketone, 2-hydroxy-2-methyl-1-phenyl-propan-1-one,
bis(2,6-dimethoxybenzoyl)-2,4-4-trimethylpentyl phosphine oxide (DMBAPO), bis(2,4,6-trimethylbenzoyl)-phenyl
phosphineoxide (Irgacure 819), 2,4,6-trimethylbenzyldiphenyl phosphine oxide and 2,4,6-trimethylbenzoyl
diphenylphosphine oxide, benzoin methyl ester and a combination of camphorquinone
and ethyl 4-(N,N-dimethylamino)benzoate. Commercially available visible light initiator
systems include Irgacure 819, Irgacure 1700, Irgacure 1800, Irgacure 819, Irgacure
1850 (all from Ciba Specialty Chemicals) and Lucirin TPO initiator (available from
BASF). Commercially available UV photoinitiators include Darocur 1173 and Darocur
2959 (Ciba Specialty Chemicals). These and other photoinitators which may be used
are disclosed in
Volume III, Photoinitiators for Free Radical Cationic & Anionic Photopolymerization,
2nd Edition by J.V. Crivello& K. Dietliker; edited by G. Bradley; John Wiley and Sons;
New York; 1998. The initiator is used in the reaction mixture in effective amounts to initiate photopolymerization
of the reaction mixture, e.g., from about 0.1 to about 2 parts by weight per 100 parts
of reactive monomer. Polymerization of the reaction mixture can be initiated using
the appropriate choice of heat or visible or ultraviolet light or other means depending
on the polymerization initiator used. Alternatively, initiation can be conducted without
a photoinitiator using, for example, e-beam. However, when a photoinitiator is used,
the preferred initiators are bisacylphosphine oxides, such as bis(2,4,6-trimethylbenzoyl)-phenyl
phosphine oxide (Irgacure 819®) or a combination of 1-hydroxycyclohexyl phenyl ketone
and bis(2,6-dimethoxybenzoyl)-2,4-4-trimethylpentyl phosphine oxide (DMBAPO), and
the preferred method of polymerization initiation is visible light. The most preferred
is bis(2,4,6-trimethylbenzoyl)-phenyl phosphine oxide (Irgacure 819®).
[0059] The preferred range of silicone-containing monomer present in the reaction mixture
is from about 5 to 95 weight percent, more preferably about 30 to 85 weight percent,
and most preferably about 45 to 75 weight percent of the reactive components in the
reaction mixture. The preferred range of hydrophilic monomer present in the above
invention is from about 5 to 80 weight percent, more preferably about 10 to 60 weight
percent, and most preferably about 20 to 50 weight percent of the reactive components
in the reaction mixture. The preferred range of diluent present in the above invention
is from about 2 to 70 weight percent, more preferably about 5 to 50 weight percent,
and most preferably about 15 to 40 weight percent of the total reaction mixture (including
reactive and nonreactive components).
[0060] Preferred combinations of reactive components and diluents are those having from
about 25 to about 55 weight% silicone-containing monomer, about 20 to about 40 weight
% hydrophilic monomer, from about 5 to about 20 weight % of an hydroxyl containing
component, from about 0.2 to about 3 weight % of a crosslinking monomer, from about
0 to about 3 weight% of a UV absorbing monomer, from about 2 to about 10 weight %
of an acyclic polyamide (all based upon the weight % of all reactive components) and
about 20 to about 50 weight % (weight % of all components, both reactive and non-reactive)
of one or more of the claimed diluents.
[0061] The reaction mixtures of the present invention can be formed by any of the methods
known to those skilled in the art, such as shaking or stirring, and used to form polymeric
articles or devices by known methods.
[0062] For example, the biomedical devices of the invention may be prepared by mixing reactive
components and the diluent(s) with a polymerization initator and curing by appropriate
conditions to form a product that can be subsequently formed into the appropriate
shape by lathing, cutting and the like. Alternatively, the reaction mixture may be
placed in a mold and subsequently cured into the appropriate article.
[0063] Various processes are known for processing the reaction mixture in the production
of contact lenses, including spincasting and static casting. Spincasting methods are
disclosed in
U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,408,429 and
3,660,545, and static casting methods are disclosed in
U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,113,224 and
4,197,266. The preferred method for producing contact lenses comprising the polymer of this
invention is by the molding of the silicone hydrogels, which is economical, and enables
precise control over the final shape of the hydrated lens. For this method, the reaction
mixture is placed in a mold having the shape of the final desired silicone hydrogel,
i.e., water-swollen polymer, and the reaction mixture is subjected to conditions whereby
the monomers polymerize, to thereby produce a polymer/diluent mixture in the shape
of the final desired product. Then, this polymer/diluent mixture is treated with a
solvent to remove the diluent and ultimately replace it with water, producing a silicone
hydrogel having a final size and shape which are quite similar to the size arid shape
of the original molded polymer/diluent article. This method can be used to form contact
lenses and is further described in
U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,495,313;
4,680,336;
4,889,664; and
5,039,459.
[0064] In another embodiment, the lens is formed without acyclic polymer and after formation,
is placed in a solution comprising acyclic polyamide. In this embodiment the lens
is formed from hydrophilic polymers in amounts between about 40 and 100 weight % of
the reactive components. Suitable solutions include packing solution, storing solution
and cleaning solutions. Preferably the lens is placed in a packing solution comprising
said acyclic polyamide. The acyclic polyamide is present in the solution in amounts
between about 0.001 and about 10%, preferably between about 0.005 and about 2% and
more preferably between about 0.01 and about 0.5 weight %, based upon all components
in the solution.
[0065] The packing solutions of the invention may be any water-based solution that is used
for the storage of contact lenses. Typical solutions include, without limitation,
saline solutions, other buffered solutions, and deionized water. The preferred aqueous
solution is saline solution containing salts including, without limitation, sodium
chloride, sodium borate, sodium phosphate, sodium hydrogenphosphate, sodium dihydrogenphosphate,
or the corresponding potassium salts of the same. These ingredients are generally
combined to form buffered solutions that include an acid and its conjugate base, so
that addition of acids and bases cause only a relatively small change in pH. The buffered
solutions may additionally include 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid (MES), sodium
hydroxide, 2,2-bis(hydroxymethyl)-2,2',2"-nitrilotriethanol, n-tris(hydroxymethyl)methyl-2-aminoethanesulfonic
acid, citric acid, sodium citrate, sodium carbonate, sodium bicarbonate, acetic acid,
sodium acetate, ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid and the like and combinations thereof.
Preferably, the solution is a borate buffered or phosphate buffered saline solution.
The solutions may also include known additional components such as viscosity adjusting
agents, antimicrobial agents, polyelectrolytes, stabilizers, chelants, antioxidants,
combinations thereof.
[0066] The device is contacted with the acyclic polyamide under conditions sufficient to
incorporate a lublricious effective amount of said acyclic polyamide. As used herein,
a lubricious effective amount, is an amount necessary to impart a level of lubricity
which may be felt manually (such as by rubbing the device between one's fingers) or
when the device is used. It has been found that in one embodiment, where the device
is a soft contact lens, when amounts of acyclic polyamide as little as 10 ppm provide
improved lens "feel". Amounts of acyclic polyamide greater than about 50 pm, and more
preferably amounts greater than about 100 ppm, (measured via extraction in 2 ml of
a 1:1DMF:deionized water solution, for 72 hours) add a more pronounced improvement
in feel. The packaged lens may be heat treated to increase the amount of acyclic polyamide
which permeates and becomes entangled in the lens. Suitable heat treatments, include,
but are not limited to conventional heat sterilization cycles, which include temperatures
of about 120°C for times of about 20 minutes and may be conducted in an autoclave.
If heat sterilization is not used, the packaged lens may be separately heat treated.
Suitable temperatures for separate heat treatment include at least about 40°C, and
preferably between about 50°C and the boiling point of the solution. Suitable heat
treatment times include at least about 10 minutes. It will be appreciated that higher
temperatures will require less treatment time.
[0067] The biomedical devices, and particularly ophthalmic lenses of the present invention
have a balance of properties which makes them particularly useful. Such properties
include clarity, water content, oxygen permeability and contact angle. Thus, in one
embodiment, the biomedical devices are contact lenses having a water content of greater
than about 17%, preferably greater than about 20% and more preferably greater than
about 25%.
[0068] As used herein clarity means substantially free from visible haze. Preferably clear
lenses have a haze value of less than about 150%, more preferably less than about
100%.
[0069] Suitable oxygen permeabilities for silicone containing lenses are preferably greater
than about 40 barrer and more preferably greater than about 60 barrer.
[0070] Also, the biomedical devices, and particularly ophthalmic devices and contact lenses
have contact angles (advancing) which are less than about 80°, preferably less than
about 70° and more preferably less than about 65°. In some preferred embodiments the
articles of the present invention have combinations of the above described oxygen
permeability, water content and contact angle. All combinations of the above ranges
are deemed to be within the present invention.
[0071] The non-limiting examples below further describe this invention.
[0072] The dynamic contact angle or DCA, was measured at 23°C, with borate buffered saline,
using a Wilhelmy balance. The wetting force between the lens surface and borate buffered
saline is measured using a Wilhelmy microbalance while the sample strip cut from the
center portion of the lens is being immersed into the saline at a rate of 100 microns/sec.
The following equation is used

or

where F is the wetting force, γ is the surface tension of the probe liquid, p is
the perimeter of the sample at the meniscus and θ is the contact angle. Typically,
two contact angles are obtained from a dynamic wetting experiment - advancing contact
angle and receding contact angle. Advancing contact angle is obtained from the portion
of the wetting experiment where the sample is being immersed into the probe liquid,
and these are the values reported herein. At least four lenses of each composition
are measured and the average is reported.
[0073] The water content was measured as follows: lenses to be tested were allowed to sit
in packing solution for 24 hours. Each of three test lens were removed from packing
solution using a sponge tipped swab and placed on blotting wipes which have been dampened
with packing solution. Both sides of the lens were contacted with the wipe. Using
tweezers, the test lens were placed in a weighing pan and weighed. The two more sets
of samples were prepared and weighed as above. The pan was weighed three times and
the average is the wet weight.
[0074] The dry weight was measured by placing the sample pans in a vacuum oven which has
been preheated to 60°C for 30 minutes. Vacuum was applied until at least 0.4 inches
Hg is attained. The vacuum valve and pump were turned off and the lenses were dried
for four hours. The purge valve was opened and the oven was allowed reach atmospheric
pressure. The pans were removed and weighed. The water content was calculated as follows:

The average and standard deviation of the water content are calculated for the samples
are reported.
[0075] Modulus was measured by using the crosshead of a constant rate of movement type tensile
testing machine equipped with a load cell that is lowered to the initial gauge height.
A suitable testing machine includes an Instron model 1122. A dog-bone shaped sample
having a 0.522 inch length, 0.276 inch "ear" width and 0.213 inch "neck" width was
loaded into the grips and elongated at a constant rate of strain of 2 in/min. until
it broke. The initial gauge length of the sample (Lo) and sample length at break (Lf)
were measured. Twelve specimens of each composition were measured and the average
is reported. Tensile modulus was measured at the initial linear portion of the stress/strain
curve.
[0076] The dynamic coefficient of friction of the contact lens was measured using a Tribometer,
Model UMT-2 unit, with a pin-on-disk sample mount. The contact lens sample was removed
from its packing solution and placed on the tip of the "pin" with the center of the
lens on the pin tip and pressed against a highly polished stainless steel disk moving
at a constant speed of either 10 or 15 cm/sec. Loads of 3, 5, 10 and 20g were used.
The duration at each load was 25 seconds and all measurements were taken at ambient
temperature. The resistant frictional force was measured and was used to calculate
the coefficient of friction using the following formula:
µ= (F-f')/N, where
µ= coefficient of friction
F= measured frictional force, f+f'
f= actual frictional force
f'= experimental artifacts due lens deformation, such as dehydration and interfacial
surface tension forces, elasticity, etc.
N= normal load
Seven lenses were tested for each lens type. The coefficient of friction were averaged
and reported.
Haze is measured by placing a hydrated test lens in borate buffered saline in a clear
20 x 40 x 10 mm glass cell at ambient temperature above a flat black background, illuminating
from below with a a fiber optic lamp (Titan Tool Supply Co. fiber optic light with
0.5" diameter light guide set at a power setting of 4-5.4) at an angle 66° normal
to the lens cell, and capturing an image of the lens from above, normal to the lens
cell with a video camera (DVC 1300C:19130 RGB camera with Navitar TV Zoom 7000 zoom
lens) placed 14 mm above the lens platform. The background scatter is subtracted from
the scatter of the lens by subtracting an image of a blank cell using EPIX XCAP V
1.0 software. The subtracted scattered light image is quantitatively analyzed, by
integrating over the central 10 mm of the lens, and then comparing to a -1.00 diopter
CSI Thin Lens®, which is arbitrarily set at a haze value of 100, with no lens set
as a haze value of 0. Five lenses are analyzed and the results are averaged to generate
a haze value as a percentage of the standard CSI lens.
[0077] Oxygen permeability (Dk) was determined by the polarographic method generally described
in ISO 9913-1: 1996(E), but with the following variations. The measurement is conducted
at an environment containing 2.1% oxygen. This environment is created by equipping
the test chamber with nitrogen and air inputs set at the appropriate ratio, for example
1800 ml/min of nitrogen and 200 ml/min of air. The t/Dk is calculated using the adjusted
p
o2. Borate buffered saline was used. The dark current was measured by using a pure humidified
nitrogen environment instead of applying MMA lenses. The lenses were not blotted before
measuring. Four lenses were stacked instead of using lenses of varied thickness. A
curved sensor was used in place of a flat sensor. The resulting Dk value is reported
in barrers.
[0078] The following abbreviations will be used throughout the Examples and have the following
meanings.
| SiGMA |
2-propenoic acid, 2-methyl-,2-hydroxy-3-[3-[1,3,3,3-tetramethyl-1-[(trimethylsilyl)oxy]disiloxanyl]propoxy]propyl
ester |
| DMA |
N,N-dimethylacrylamide |
| HEMA |
2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate |
| mPDMS |
800-1000 MW (Mn) monomethacryloxypropyl terminated mono-n-butyl terminated polydimethylsiloxane |
| Norbloc |
2-(2'-hydroxy-5-methacrylyloxyethylphenyl)-2H-benzotriazole |
| CGI 1850 |
1:1 (wgt) blend of 1-hydroxycyclohexyl phenyl ketone and bis(2,6-dimethoxybenzoyl)-2,4-4-trimethylpentyl
phosphine oxide |
| CGI 819 |
bis(2,4,6-trimethylbenzoyl)-phenylphosphineoxide |
| PVP |
poly(N-vinyl pyrrolidone) (K value 90) |
| Blue HEMA |
the reaction product of Reactive Blue 4 and HEMA, as described in Example 4 of U.S. Pat. no. 5,944,853 |
| IPA |
isopropyl alcohol |
| D30 |
3,7-dimethyl-3-octanol |
| DI water |
deionized water |
| TEGDMA |
tetraethyleneglycol dimethacrylate |
| PVMA |
poly(N-vinyl-N-methylacetamide) (prepared in Preparation 2) |
| mPDMS-OH |
mono-(3-methacryloxy-2-hydroxypropyloxy)propyl terminated, mono-butyl terminated polydimethylsiloxane
(MW 1100) Prepared as in Preparation 1 |
| acPDMS |
bis-3-acryloxy-2-hydroxypropyloxypropyl polydimethylsiloxane (MW ∼1.000), commercially
available from Geleste, Inc, of Tullytown PA under the name Polydimethylsiloxane acryloxy
terminated DMS-U22. |
| Macromer |
Prepared as described in US20030052424, Example 1 |
| TMPTMA |
trimethylolpropane trimethacrylate |
| BAGE |
boric acid ester of glycerin |
| MAA |
methacrylic acid |
| Irgacure 1700 |
A 75/25% (wt) blend of 2-hydroxy-2-methyl-1-phenyl-propan-1-one and bis(2,6-dimethoxybenzoyl)-2,4,4-trimethylpentyl
phosphine oxide |
| Zeonor |
Cyclo olefin thermoplastic polymer from Nippon Zeon Co., Ltd. |
Preparation 1
[0079] A three neck, 500mL round bottom flask equipped with a magnetic stirrer, reflux condensor
w/drying tube, and a thermocouple was charged with 5.0 g (0.054 mole) dry lithium
methacrylate. Methacrylic acid (50.0 g, 0.584 mole) and 1.0 g p-methoxyphenol were
added to the system, which was stirred while adding 200 g (about 0.20 mole) monoglycidoxypropyl
polydimethylsiloxane (1000 M
N) to the flask. The reaction mixture was heated to 90°C. The mixture was heated for
15 hours at the given temperature, allowed to cool to ambient conditions, and diluted
with 250mL of ethyl acetate.
[0080] The organics were washed two times with 250mL of 0.5N aqueous sodium hydroxide. Once
all the methacrylic acid present in the mixture was neutralized, separation of the
two layers dramatically slowed down. The third and fourth washes were performed using
an aqueous solution of 0.5N sodium hydroxide and 5% wt/volume sodium chloride in order
to speed up the separation process.
[0081] The organics were dried over 30g of anhydrous sodium sulfate, and filtered through
a fritted glass funnel containing 75g of flash grade silica gel to remove any remaining
salts in the system. The filtrate was freed of volatile material in a rotary evaporator
at 55°C under a pressure of approximately 10mbar.
[0082] The product, mono-(3-methacryloxy-2-hydroxypropyloxy)propyl terminated, mono-butyl
terminated polydimethylsiloxane (MW 1100), was isolated as a colorless, clear liquid,
173.0g, 79.7%.
Preparation 2
[0083] A solution of 20 ml N-vinyl-N-methylactamide, 20 g t-butanol and 15.5 mg azobisisobutyronitrile
was degassed under vacuum, then heated to 75°C for 16 hours to produce a viscous clear
solution. 150 ml methanol was added and the mixture was transferred to a flask for
rotary evaporation. After solvent was removed the polymer was dissolved in 100 ml
methylene chloride and the polymer was precipitated by addition of about 1 L hexane.
The precipitate was squeezed to remove excess solvent, and dried under vacuum overnight
to produce 12.3 g PVMA as a white solid.
PVMA Preparation
[0084] A solution of 102.5 g N-methyl-N-vinylacetamide, 102.5 g t-butanol and 46.5 mg 2,2'-azobisisobutylnitrile
was deoxygenated by bubbling N
2 gas through it for one hour. The solution was heated to 75°C with stirring under
N
2 for 16 hours. Solvent was evaporated from the resulting viscous solution under vacuum.
The resulting crude polymer was dissolved in 250 ml CH
2Cl
2. 2.5 L hexane was added to precipitate polymer. The resulting solid polymer mass
was broken into pieces and dried under vacuum at 80°C. Molecular weight analysis by
GPC showed M
N and M
W of 366,000 and 556,000 respectively.
Example 1
[0085] Contact lenses were made from the formulation listed in Table 1, below.
Table 1
| Component |
Amount (g) |
Wt%a |
| mPDMS |
4.771 |
30.98 |
| SIGMA |
4.307 |
27.97 |
| DMA |
3.692 |
23.98 |
| HEMA |
0.929 |
6.03 |
| TEGDMA |
0.232 |
1.51 |
| Norbloc |
0.311 |
2.02 |
| PVMA |
1.082 |
7.03 |
| CGI1850 |
0.074 |
0.48 |
| D30(diluent) |
4.602 |
23.01b |
| a Excluding diluent. |
| b With respect to final reactive monomer mix. |
The monomer mixture was degassed by placing it under vacuum for 30 minutes, and then
used to make lenses in a nitrogen box (Zeonor front curves and polypropylene back
curves, 50°C) under four parallel visible light Philips TL03 fluorescent lamps (30
minute cure). The lenses were demolded manually and released in 70:30 IPA:DI water.
The lenses were then soaked in the following solutions for the times indicated: 100%
IPA (1 hour), 70:30 (vol) IPA:DI water (1 hour), 10:90 IPA:DI water (1 hour), DI water
(30 minutes). The lenses were stored in fresh DI water. The lenses felt highly lubricious
upon touching. For haze/DCA analysis (Table 2) lenses were autoclaved once (122.5°C,
30 minutes) in 5.0 mL packing solution (borate buffered saline solution), while for
mechanical properties and water content (Table 2), the lenses were autoclaved once
in packing solution containing 50 ppm methylcellulose.
Table 2.
| Property |
Value |
| Modulus (n=5) |
537.8 +/- 41.3 kPa(78 +/- 6 psi) |
| Elongation (n=5) |
175 +/- 41% |
| Water content (n=9) |
39 +/- 0.3% |
| Haze (n=5) |
28 +/- 2% |
| Advancing contact angle (n=4) |
42 +/- 18° |
[0086] The properties in Table 2 demonstrate that PVMA can be incorporated into a hydrogel
composition to form an article having desirable mechanical properties.
Example 2
[0087] Contact lenses were made from the formulation listed in Table 3, below..
Table 3.
| Component |
Amount used (g) |
Percenta |
| mPDMS-OH |
0.87 |
52.57 |
| acPDMS |
0.0427 |
2.58 |
| DMA |
0.394 |
23.81 |
| HEMA |
0.228 |
13.78 |
| PVMA |
0.116 |
7.01 |
| CGI 819 |
0.0041 |
0.25 |
| Diluent: |
|
|
| t-amyl alcohol |
1.351 |
44.95b |
| a Excluding diluent. |
| b With respect to final reactive monomer mix. |
The monomer mixture was degassed under vacuum for 10 minutes, and then used to make
lenses in a nitrogen box (Zeonor front curves and polypropylene back curves, 50°C)
under four parallel Philips TL03 lamps (20 minute cure). The lenses were demolded
manually and immersed in 30:70 IPA:DI water for 10 minutes. The lenses were released
in ∼1L of boiling DI water, then transferred into packing solution. The lenses felt
highly lubricious. For DCA analysis lenses were autoclaved once (122.5°C, 30 minutes)
in packing solution (5.0 mL). The advancing contact angle was determined to be 45
± 5°.
Comparative Example 3 and Example 4
[0088] Contact lenses were made from the formulations listed in Table 4, below.
Table 4..
| Component |
Comp. Ex. 3 (wt%)* |
Ex. 4 (wt%)* |
| mPDMS-OH |
50.00 |
49.97 |
| Macromer ** |
10.01 |
9.99 |
| AcPDMS |
2.02 |
2.00 |
| DMA |
20.00 |
20.05 |
| HEMA |
8.52 |
8.53 |
| Norbloc |
2.20 |
2.20 |
| PVP 360,000 |
7.00 |
-- |
| PVMA |
-- |
7.02 |
| CGI 819 |
0.25 |
0.25 |
| Diluent: |
|
|
| t-amyl alcohol |
45b |
45b |
| a Excluding diluent. |
| b With respect to final reactive monomer mix. Macromer preparation described in U.S. 2003/0052424 |
The monomer mixes were filtered through 3 µm pore filter before use. The monomer mixtures
were degassed under vacuum for 15 minutes, and then used to make lenses in a nitrogen
box (Zeonor front curves and polypropylene back curves, 50°C) under four parallel
Philips TL03 lamps (30 minute cure). The lenses were demolded manually, released in
∼1L of boiling DI water, and then transferred into packing solution. Table 5 summarizes
the properties of the lenses.
Table 5.
| Property |
Comp. Ex 3 |
Ex 4 |
| Dk |
171.5 |
--a |
| Modulus (n=5) |
606.7 +/- 41.3 kPa (88 +/- 6 psi) |
634.3 +/- 69.0kPa (92 +/- 10 psi) |
| Elongation (n=5) |
216 +/- 71% |
232 +/- 30% |
| Water content (n=9) |
35.6 +/- 0.5% |
38.6 +/- 0.3% |
| Haze (n=5) |
12.9 +/- 3.9% |
14.3 +/- 3.8% |
| Advancing contact |
59 +/- 7° |
50 +/- 9° |
| angle (n=5) |
|
|
A study was conducted to assess the relative lubricity of lenses containing PVP (Example
3) against lenses containing PVMA (Example 4). Seven subjects were masked from the
identity of the lenses, and provided two vials containing a single lens. One vial
contained a lens from Example 3 (which contained PVP), and the other contained a lens
from Example 4 (containing PVMA). Each subject was asked to subjectively rate which
lens felt more lubricious. All seven subjects picked the lens of Example 4.
[0089] The dynamic coefficients of friction (COF) of the lenses of Examples 3 and 4 were
measured. The measurements were done using a polished stainless steel as the reference
surface and the test speed was at 15 cm/s. All measurements were done in the lens
own packing solution from the package."
The data in Table 6 show that incorporation of 7% PVMA in silicone hydrogel lenses
provided more lubricious lenses than incorporation of 7% PVP.
Table 6.
| Ex. # |
IWA |
COF |
| C3 |
PVP |
0.07 (0.01) |
| 4 |
PVMA |
0.038 (0.004) |
Table 6 shows that the lenses with PVMA have a COF of about half that of PVP.
Examples 5 and 6
[0090] 1-Day Acuvue® brand contact lenses (commercially available from Johnson & Johnson
Vision Care, Inc.) were washed in borate buffered saline (5 rinses over 24 hours)
to remove any residual TWEEN-80. The washed lenses were packaged in with either 250
or 500 ppm PVMA in borate buffered saline solution, as shown in Table 7, below and
sterilized (121°C, 30 minutes). The contact angle was determined and is reported in
Table 7.
Table 7
| Ex. # |
[PVMA] (ppm) |
contact angle |
| 5 |
250 |
74 (5) |
| 6 |
500 |
56 (9) |
| Control |
- |
78 (5) |
[0091] The diameter of the lenses was measured once a week over a period of five weeks.
The results are shown in Table 8.
Table 8- PVMA lens diameters
| Ex# |
PVMA (ppm) |
T (°C) |
Week 1 |
Week 2 |
Week 3 |
Week 4 |
Week 5 |
| C |
0 |
23°C |
14.17 |
14.14 |
14.18 |
14.17 |
14.18 |
| C |
0 |
55°C |
14.15 |
14.12 |
14.20 |
14.15 |
14.16 |
| 5 |
250 |
23°C |
14.20 |
14.15 |
14.20 |
14.17 |
14.19 |
| 5 |
250 |
55°C |
14.20 |
14.16 |
14.24 |
14.19 |
14.19 |
| 6 |
500 |
23°C |
14.19 |
14.19 |
14.22 |
14.20 |
14.21 |
| 6 |
500 |
55°C |
14.23 |
14.19 |
14.28 |
14.20 |
14.20 |
The lens diameters for lenses at both PVMA concentrations remained stable.
Example 7
[0092] 1-Day Acuvue® brand contact lenses (commercially available from Johnson & Johnson
Vision Care, Inc.) were placed into borate-buffered saline containing 500 ppm PVMA,
as described in Example 6. The lenses were sterilized multiple times; 30 minutes at
121°C per cycle. The lens surfaces had a lubricious feel after each sterilization
cycle.
Example 8
[0093] 1-Day Acuvue® brand contact lenses (commercially available from Johnson & Johnson
Vision Care, Inc.) were placed into plastic blister packages containing 950 µl each
of a solution of 1000 ppm PVMA in borate-buffered saline. The packages were sealed,
heat sterilized (121°C for 30 minutes) and clinically evaluated in a double-masked
study. Nine patients wore the lenses in both eyes for 3-4 days with overnight removal
and daily replacement, and then wore untreated 1-Day Acuvue® brand contact lenses
for 3-4 days with overnight removal and daily replacement as a control. Patients were
asked to rate the lens using a questionnaire. The results are shown in Table 10.
Table 10
| |
Preferred Ex. 11 |
Preferred Control |
Liked both |
Liked neither |
| Overall preference |
67% |
11% |
22% |
0% |
| Comfort preference |
67% |
0% |
33% |
0% |
| End of day comfort |
78% |
11% |
11% |
0% |
| Dryness preference |
78% |
11% |
11% |
0% |
| Wear time |
78% |
11% |
11% |
0% |
Example 9 and 10
[0094] The reactions mixtures listed in Table 11 were cured in a nitrogen atmosphere (Zeonor
front curves and back curves, ∼75 mg per cavity, ∼50°C) under Philips TLK 40W/03 lamps
(4 minute cure). Lenses were released from the molds in DI water containing about
800 ppm Tween 80 at ∼70°C for 150-210 minutes, and rinsed twice in DI water at about
45°C for 15-60 minutes and about 180 minutes, respectively. The lenses were packaged
in
1•
DAY ACUVUE
® Brand contact lens bowl and foil in borate buffered saline and sterilized (121°C,
30 minutes).
Table 11
| Components |
Ex. 9 (wt%) |
Ex. 10 (wt%) |
| HEMA |
92.89 |
92.89 |
| Norbloc 7966 |
0.95 |
0.95 |
| Irgacure 1700 |
1.34 |
1.34 |
| EGDMA |
0.77 |
0.77 |
| TMPTMA |
0.09 |
0.09 |
| MAA |
1.94 |
1.94 |
| Blue HEMA |
0.02 |
0.02 |
| PVP 360K |
2.00 |
- |
| PVMA |
- |
2.00 |
| Diluent |
52:48 |
52:48 |
| BAGE Diluent |
48% |
48% |
[0095] The feel of the lenses of Examples 9-10 were subjectively compared as follows. The
control was 1-Day Acuvue® brand contact lenses. Ten contact lens wearers were asked
to rate their preference among different lenses (including the 1-DAY ACUVUE brand
contact lens control) based on touch alone. A rating of "1" indicated that the lens
was preferred, and based upon feel alone, the tester would prefer that lens. A rating
of "4" was not preferred. The contact lens wearers rating the lenses were permitted
to rate more than one lens a 1. The average preference scores are listed in Table
12 below. Standard deviations are shown in parenthesis.
Table 12
| Ex # |
Wetting agent |
Pref. score |
| 9 |
PVP |
2.6(1) |
| 10 |
PVMA |
1.6(0.9) |
| control |
- |
3.3(1) |
[0096] Thus, lenses formed from conventional hydrogel formulations which contain PVMA display
tactile properties such as lubricity which are better than lenses which do not contain
any wetting agent, and are at least as good as lenses containing PVP.
1. Kontaktlinse aus einem Silikon-Hydrogel, umfassend ein Linsenpolymer mit mindestens
einem darin verhakten acyclischen Polyamid, das Wiederholungseinheiten der Formel
I

umfasst, wobei X für eine direkte Bindung,

steht,
wobei R3 für eine C1- bis C3-Alkylgruppe steht;
R1 aus H, geradkettigen oder verzweigten, substituierten oder unsubstituierten C1- bis
C4-Alkylgruppen ausgewählt ist,
R2 aus H, geradkettigen oder verzweigten, substituierten oder unsubstituierten C1- bis
C4-Alkylgruppen, Aminogruppen mit bis zu zwei Kohlenstoffatomen, Amidgruppen mit bis
zu vier Kohlenstoffatomen und Alkoxygruppen mit bis zu zwei Kohlenstoffatomen ausgewählt
ist und wobei die Zahl der Kohlenstoffatome in R1 und R2 zusammengenommen 8 oder weniger, vorzugsweise 6 oder weniger, beträgt.
2. Linse nach Anspruch 1, wobei R1 und R2 unabhängig aus H oder substituierten oder unsubstituierten C1- bis C2-Alkylgruppen,
vorzugsweise H oder unsubstituierten C1- bis C2-Alkylgruppen, ausgewählt sind.
3. Linse nach Anspruch 1, wobei X für eine direkte Bindung steht.
4. Linse nach Anspruch 3, wobei R2 aus geradkettigen oder verzweigten unsubstituierten C1- bis C4-Alkylgruppen ausgewählt
ist.
5. Vorrichtung nach Anspruch 1, umfassend eine Mischung von acyclischen Polyamiden.
6. Linse nach Anspruch 1, wobei das acyclische Polyamid ein gewichtsmittleres Molekulargewicht
von mindestens 100.000, vorzugsweise mindestens 300.000 und weiter bevorzugt mindestens
1.000.000 aufweist.
7. Linse nach Anspruch 1, wobei es sich bei dem acyclischen Polyamid um ein Copolymer,
das mindestens 50 Mol-%, vorzugsweise mindestens 80 Mol-%, der Wiederholungseinheit
der Formel I umfasst, handelt.
8. Linse nach Anspruch 7, wobei das Copolymer ferner Wiederholungseinheiten aus der Gruppe
bestehend aus N-Vinylamiden, Acrylamiden, Hydroxyalkyl-(meth)acrylaten, Alkyl(meth)acrylaten
und siloxansubstituierten Acrylaten oder Methacrylaten umfasst.
9. Linse nach Anspruch 7, wobei das Copolymer ferner Wiederholungseinheiten aus der Gruppe
bestehend aus N-Vinylpyrrolidon, N,N-Dimethylacrylamid, 2-Hydroxyethylmethacrylat,
Vinylacetat, Acrylnitril, Hydroxypropylmethacrylat, 2-Hydroxyethylacrylat, Methylmethacrylat,
Butylmethacrylat, Methacryloxypropyltristrimethylsiloxysilan und Mischungen davon,
vorzugsweise N-Vinylpyrrolidon, N,N-Dimethylacrylamid, 2-Hydroxyethylmethacrylat und
Mischungen davon, umfasst.
10. Linse nach Anspruch 1, wobei die Wiederholungseinheit N-Vinyl-N-methylacetamid umfasst.
11. Linse nach Anspruch 1, wobei es sich bei dem acyclischen Polyamid um Poly(N-vinyl-N-methylacet-amid
handelt.
12. Linse nach Anspruch 1, wobei die Vorrichtung aus einem Hydrogel, das mindestens eine
hydrophile Komponente umfasst, gebildet ist.
13. Linse nach Anspruch 1, wobei es sich bei der Vorrichtung um eine ophthalmische Vorrichtung,
vorzugsweise eine Kontaktlinse, handelt.
14. Linse nach Anspruch 1, wobei das acyclische Polyamid in einer Menge zwischen 1 und
15 Gewichtsprozent, vorzugsweise zwischen 3 und 15 Gewichtsprozent, weiter bevorzugt
zwischen 5 und 12 Gewichtsprozent, bezogen auf die Summe aller reaktiven Komponenten,
vorliegt.
15. Verfahren, umfassend das Kontaktieren einer Kontaktlinse aus einem Silikon-Hydrogel
mit einer Lösung, die mindestens ein acyclisches Polyamid, das Wiederholungseinheiten
der Formel I

umfasst, wobei X für eine direkte Bindung,

steht,
wobei R3 für eine C1- bis C3-Alkylgruppe steht;
R1 aus H, geradkettigen oder verzweigten, substituierten oder unsubstituierten C1- bis
C4-Alkylgruppen ausgewählt ist,
R2 aus H, geradkettigen oder verzweigten, substituierten oder unsubstituierten C1- bis
C4-Alkylgruppen, Aminogruppen mit bis zu zwei Kohlenstoffatomen, Amidgruppen mit bis
zu vier Kohlenstoffatomen und Alkoxygruppen mit bis zu zwei Kohlenstoffatomen ausgewählt
ist und wobei die Zahl der Kohlenstoffatome in R1 und R2 zusammengenommen 8 oder weniger beträgt,
wobei sich die Polymerkette des acyclischen Polyamids mit der Hydrogel-Polymermatrix
verhakt, unter Bedingungen, die zur Einarbeitung einer gleitfähigkeitsvermittelnd
wirksamen Menge des acyclischen Polyamids in die Kontaktlinse ausreichen, wobei die
gleitfähigkeitsvermittelnd wirksame Menge mindestens 10 ppm des acyclischen Polyamids,
gemessen durch Extraktion in 2 ml einer Lösung von DMF und vollentsalztem Wasser im
Verhältnis 1:1 über einen Zeitraum von 72 Stunden, beträgt.
16. Verfahren nach Anspruch 15, wobei die Lösung zwischen 0,001 und 10% acyclisches Polyamid,
vorzugsweise zwischen 0,005 und 2% acyclisches Polyamid, bezogen auf alle Komponenten
in der Lösung, umfasst.
17. Verfahren nach Anspruch 15, bei dem der Kontaktierungsschritt ferner Erhitzen, vorzugsweise
Autoklavieren, umfasst.