| Literature DB >> 22619725 |
Abstract
Disseminated metastatic breast cancer needs aggressive treatment due to its reduced response to anticancer treatment and hence low survival and quality of life. Although in theory a combination drug therapy has advantages over single-agent therapy, no appreciable survival enhancement is generally reported whereas increased toxicity is frequently seen in combination treatment especially in chemotherapy. Currently used combination treatments in metastatic breast cancer will be discussed with their challenges leading to the introduction of novel combination anticancer drug delivery systems that aim to overcome these challenges. Widely studied drug delivery systems such as liposomes, dendrimers, polymeric nanoparticles, and water-soluble polymers can concurrently carry multiple anticancer drugs in one platform. These carriers can provide improved target specificity achieved by passive and/or active targeting mechanisms.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22619725 PMCID: PMC3350970 DOI: 10.1155/2012/915375
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Drug Deliv ISSN: 2090-3022
Figure 1Schematic representation of various combination drug delivery approaches for treatment of cancer. (a) combination of small molecule chemotherapeutic agents, (b) combination of target specific biologic agents including monoclonal antibodies, and small molecule chemotherapeutics (c) carrier-mediated combination drug delivery (see Figures 2 to 5 for structures of various carriers).
Clinically used combination regimens of nonspecific small molecule chemotherapeutic agents in metastatic breast cancer.
| Classes | Regimens | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Doxorubicin + Cyclophosphamide | ||||
| Anthracycline based | Doxorubicin + Fluorouracil | Improved RR | No significant difference in time to progression or survival, more treatment related toxicity, and less quality of life | [ |
| Epirubicin + Cyclophosphamide | ||||
| Epirubicin + Fluorouracil | ||||
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| Doxorubicin + Paclitaxel | Improved RR and PFS | More hematologic toxicity, cardiotoxicity | [ | |
| Taxane based | Doxorubicin + Docetaxel | |||
| Capecitabine + Docetaxel | Improved TTP, RR, and OS | Increased nonhematologic toxicity (diarrhea, stomatitis, hand-foot syndrome) | [ | |
| Gemcitabine + Paclitaxel | ||||
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| Other combinations | Ixabepilone + Capecitabine | Improved RR and TTP in heavily pretreated patient | Peripheral neuropathy | [ |
| Cyclophosphamide + Methotrexate + Fluorouracil | Improved RR, RFS, and OS | Rapid bone loss | [ | |
OS: overall survival; PFS: progression-free survival; RFS: relapse-free survival; RR: response rate; TTP: time to progression.
Clinically used combination regimens of target specific biologic agent(s) in metastatic breast cancer.
| Classes | Regimens | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trastuzumab + Doxorubicin + Cyclophosphamide | Improved RR, PFS, and OS | Cardiomyopathy, hematologic toxicity | [ | |
| Trastuzumab + Epirubicin + Cyclophosphamide | ||||
| mAb based | Trastuzumab + other chemotherapy (Paclitaxel, Docetaxel, Vinorelbine, Capecitabine, Platinum compounds, and Gemcitabine) | Improved RR and PFS | Increased hematologic toxicity | [ |
| Bevacizumab + Paclitaxel | Improved PFS | More toxicity (hypertension, proteinuria, bleeding, nasal septum perforation, thromboembolic event, heart failure, mortality) | [ | |
| Cetuximab + Cisplatin | Improved RR and PFS in patients with TNBC | More acne-like rash, neutropenia, dyspnea | [ | |
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| Lapatinib + Capecitabine | ||||
| Lapatinib + Paclitaxel | Improved RR, TTP, PFS | More toxicity (toxicity from chemotherapy plus diarrhea, skin rash, nausea, pruritis) | [ | |
| Tyrosine kinase inhibitor based | Lapatinib + Letrozole | |||
| Sunitinib + Docetaxel | No worsen toxicity | Nonsignificant combination activity | [ | |
| Erotinib + Cisplatin + Gemcitabine | Well tolerated | No survival benefit | [ | |
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| PARP inhibitor based | Iniparib + Gemcitabine + Carboplatin | Improved PFS and OS | Neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, anemia, fatigue or asthenia, leukopenia | [ |
| Olaparib + Gemcitabine + Carboplatin | Improved RR | [ | ||
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| Multiple targeted | Trastuzumab + Lapatinib | Improved PFS and Overcome TRZ resistance | Additive toxicity from TRZ and Lapatinib, patient compliance issue (IV and oral administration) | [ |
OS: overall survival; PFS: progression-free survival; RFS: relapse-free survival; RR: response rate; TTP: time to progression; TRZ: trastuzumab.
Figure 2Combination drug delivery systems based on liposomes. (a) Combination of drugs encapsulated in the hydrophilic core of liposome (b) polymer-caged nanobin (PCN); liposome-based hybrid system carrying a combination of encapsulated drug and conjugated drug.
Combination drug delivery systems based on liposomes.
| Formulation | Therapeutics | Indication | Status | Targeting | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PEG-Liposome | Topotecan + Vincristine | Brain cancer | In vivo | Passive | |
| Polymer-caged nanobins (PCN); Liposome surrounded by cholesterol-terminated poly(acrylic acid) | Cisplatin + Doxorubicin | Various cancers | In vitro | Passive | [ |
| Liposome | Cytarabine + Daunorubicin | Acute myeloid leukemia | Phase II | Passive | [ |
| Liposome | Irinotecan + Floxuridine | Colorectal cancer | Phase II | Passive | [ |
| Mixture of two Liposomes | Irinotecan + Cisplatin | Small-cell lung cancer | In vivo | Passive | [ |
| PEG-Liposome | Quercetin + Vincristine | Hormone- and TRZ-insensitive breast cancer | In vivo | Passive | [ |
| Cationic, anionic PEG-Liposome | siRNA + Doxorubicin | MDR-breast cancer | In vivo | Passive | [ |
| Liposome | 6-Mercaptopurine + Daunorubicin | Acute myeloid leukemia | In vitro | Passive | [ |
| Transferrin- (Tf-) conjugated PEG-Liposome | Doxorubicin + Verapamil | MDR-leukemia | In vitro | Active (Tf receptor) | [ |
PEG: polyethylene glycol; MDR: multidrug resistant; TRZ: trastuzumab.
Figure 3Combination drug delivery systems based on dendrimers: concurrent delivery of water-soluble and -insoluble drugs by adsorption to the surface (ionic interaction), encapsulation within hydrophobic microcavities inside branching clefts or direct covalent conjugation to the surface functional groups.
Combination drug delivery systems based on dendrimers.
| Carrier composition | Therapeutics | Indication | Status | Targeting | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| G5 PAMAM dendrimer | Antisense-miRNA21 + 5-FU | Glioblastoma | In vitro | Active; miRNA overexpression | [ |
| Aptamer-G4 PAMAM dendrimer conjugates | Unmethylated CpG-ONTs + Doxorubicin | Prostate cancer | In vivo | Active; a single-strand DNA-A9 PSMA, RNA aptamer hybrid | [ |
| Dendritic PEG | Paclitaxel + alendronate | Cancer bone metastases | In vivo | Active; Bone metastasis | [ |
| RGDfK-G3 Poly-lysine dendrimer | Doxorubicin + siRNA | Glioblastoma | In vitro | Active; | [ |
| Folate-G5 poly-propyleneimine dendrimer with ethylenediamine core | Methotrexate + all-trans-retinoic acid | Leukemia | In vitro | Active; folate receptor | [ |
PAMAM: poly (amidoamine); PEG: polyethylene glycol; PSMA: prostate-specific membrane antigen; ONT: oligonucleotides; 5-FU: 5-fluorouracil.
Combination drug delivery systems based on polymeric nanoparticles.
| Carrier composition | Therapeutics | Indication | Status | Targeting | References |
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| PEG-PLGA | Lonidamine + Paclitaxel | MDR breast cancer | In vivo | Active; EGFR | [ |
| Methoxy PEG-PLGA | Doxorubicin + Paclitaxel | Various cancer | In vitro | Passive | [ |
| PEG-PLA | Paclitaxel, Etoposide, or Docetaxel + 17-AAG | Various cancer | In vitro | Active; HSP90 | [ |
| PEG-PLA | Combretastatin A4 + Doxorubicin | Various cancer | In vitro | Active; angiogenesis | [ |
| PDMAEMA-PCL-PDMAEMA | Paclitaxel + siRNA | Prostate cancer | In vitro | Active; VEGF | [ |
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| PEG-DSPE/PLGA | Combretastatin + Doxorubicin | Lung carcinoma | In vivo | Passive | [ |
| PEG-PLA and PEG-DSPE/TPGS | Paclitaxel + 17-AAG (HSP90 inhibitor) | Ovarian cancer | In vitro | Active; HSP90 | [ |
| P(MDS-co-CES) | Paclitaxel + Interleukin-12 or siRNA | Breast cancer | In vivo | Active; Bcl-2 | [ |
| PEG-b-PHSA | Doxorubicin + Wortmannin | Breast cancer | In vitro | Passive | [ |
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| PLGA | Vincristine + Verapamil | Hepatocellular carcinoma | In vitro | Passive | [ |
| PACA | Doxorubicin + Cyclosporine A | Various cancer | In vitro | Passive | [ |
17-AAG: 17-allylamino-17-demethyoxygeldanamycin; EGFR: epidermal growth factor receptor; HSP90: heat shock protein; PDMAEMA-PCL-PDMAEMA: poly(N,N-dimethylamino-2-ethyl methacrylate)-polycaprolactone-poly(N,N-dimethylamino-2-ethyl methacrylate); PEG: polyethylene glycol; PEG-b-PHSA: PEG-block-poly(N-hexyl stearate l-aspartamide); PEG-PLA: polyethylene glycol-poly lactic acid; PEG-DSPE: PEG-distearoylphosphatidyl ethanolamine; PACA: polyalkylcyanoacrylate; PLGA: poly(d,l-lactide-co-glycolide); P(MDS-co-CES): poly(N-methyldietheneamine sebacate)-co-[(cholesteryl oxocarbonylamido ethyl) methyl bis(ethylene) ammonium bromide] sebacate; TPGS: tocopheryl polyethylene glycol; VEGF: vasculature epidermal growth factor.
Figure 4Combination drug delivery systems based on polymeric nanoparticles: (a) micellar polymeric nanoparticle, (b) nonmicellar polymeric nanoparticles.
Figure 5Combination drug delivery systems based on water-soluble polymer conjugates.
Figure 6TRZ-STP-PKI166 conjugate.
Combination drug delivery systems based on water-soluble polymer conjugates.
| Carrier composition | Therapeutics | Indication | Status | Targeting | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HPMA copolymer | Aminoglutethimide + Doxorubicin | Breast cancer | In vitro | Passive | [ |
| HPMA copolymer | Gemcitabine + Doxorubicin | Prostate cancer | In vivo | Passive | [ |
| HPMA copolymer | Doxorubicin + Dexamethasone | General cancer | In vivo | Passive | [ |
| HPMA copolymer | TNP-470 + Alendronate | Bone metastasis | In vivo | Active; bone | [ |
| HPMA copolymer | Paclitaxel + Alendronate | Bone metastasis | In vivo | Active; bone | [ |
| Branched PEG | Epirubicin + Nitric oxide | In vivo | Passive | [ | |
| Branched PEG | Camptothecin + BH3 domain peptide | Iv vivo | Active; LHRH | [ | |
| HPMA copolymer | Trastuzumab + PKI166 | HER2 overexpressed breast cancer | In vitro | Active; HER2 | [ |
HER2: human epidermal growth factor receptor type 2; HPMA: N-(2-hydroxypropyl)methacrylamide; LHRH: luteinizing-hormone release hormone.