| Literature DB >> 22664472 |
Qihang Sun1, Maciej Radosz, Youqing Shen.
Abstract
Cancer drug delivery achieving high therapeutic efficacy and low side effects requires a nanocarrier to tightly retain the drug, efficiently reach the tumor, then quickly enter the tumor cells and release the drug. Furthermore, the nanocarrier intended for clinical applications should use materials safe as pharmaceutical excipients and its formulation (nanomedicine) should have good manufacture processes with scale-up ability. Thus, the challenge is to design safe, approvable, and easily scaled-up nanocarriers that simultaneously meet the two pairs of requirements of 'drug retention in circulation versus intracellular release' and 'stealthy in circulation versus sticky (cell-binding) in tumor' at the right places in order to deliver a cytosolic drug dose lethal to cancer cells with minimized side effects. Herein, we briefly review these elements aimed at promoting developments of translational nanocarriers.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22664472 DOI: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2012.05.042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Control Release ISSN: 0168-3659 Impact factor: 9.776