| Literature DB >> 22737191 |
Teresa Simón-Yarza1, Fabio R Formiga, Esther Tamayo, Beatriz Pelacho, Felipe Prosper, María J Blanco-Prieto.
Abstract
Since the discovery of the Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) and its leading role in the angiogenic process, this has been seen as a promising molecule for promoting neovascularization in the infarcted heart. However, even though several clinical trials were initiated, no therapeutic effects were observed, due in part to the short half life of this factor when administered directly to the tissue. In this context, drug delivery systems appear to offer a promising strategy to overcome limitations in clinical trials of VEGF.The aim of this paper is to review the principal drug delivery systems that have been developed to administer VEGF in cardiovascular disease. Studies published in the last 5 years are reviewed and the main features of these systems are explained. The tissue engineering concept is introduced as a therapeutic alternative that holds promise for the near future.Entities:
Keywords: VEGF; angiogenesis; cardiovascular disease; protein delivery; tissue engineering.
Year: 2012 PMID: 22737191 PMCID: PMC3381347 DOI: 10.7150/thno.3682
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theranostics ISSN: 1838-7640 Impact factor: 11.556
Clinical trials using VEGF recombinant proteins for cardiac repair.
| Route | Trial | n | Outcomes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intracoronary | Phase I | 14 | Some improvement in perfusion in patients treated with low-dose VEGF; five of six patients had perfusion improvement at rest and stress at higher doses | |
| Intracoronary | Phase I | 15 | Dose screening study; well tolerated up to 0.05 mg/kg/min; myocardial perfusion imaging was improved in 7 out of 14 patients at 60 days | |
| Intravenous | Phase I | 28 | An increase in exercise capacity was reported without any safety issues | |
| Intracoronary/ | Phase II | 178 | VIVA study; safe and well tolerated; no improvement beyond placebo in all measurements by day 60. By day 120, high-dose VEGF resulted in significant improvement in angina; no improvements in myocardial perfusion |
Summary of VEGF delivery and cardiac repair in the last 2 years.
| DDS | COMPOSITION | ANGIOGENIC FACTOR/S | PREPARATION METHOD | ANGIOGNENIC EFFICACY ASSAY | AUTHOR'S CONCLUSION | REF. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SCAFFOLD | surface crosslinked Heparin | VEGF | Solvent casting and particulate leaching method | Subcutaneous implant model in mice | Modification of the scaffold with heparin improves VEGF efficacy | ||
| hollow-fiber membrane | cellulose acetate | VEGF & S1P | Double injection extrusion/ precipitation method | Subcutaneous implant model in mice | System capable of exploring sequential delivery of angiogenic factors. | ||
| biomimetic hydrogel (adhesion peptide sequence RGDS) | PEG diacrylate | VEGF | Photopolymerization | The system promotes EC proliferation, migration and viability maintenance | |||
| patch with covalently immobilized VEGF | collagen | VEGF | Commercial scaffold | Right ventricular | Collagen scaffold with covalently immobilized VEGF improved tissue formation | ||
| hydrogel with surface crosslinked Heparin | star-PEG | VEGF & FGF-2 | Cross linking | Angiogenic activity superior to the administration of single factors | |||
| hydrogel | alginate | VEGF | Cross linking | Hindlimb ischemia in mice | |||
| covalently immobilized factors | collagen | VEGF & Ang-1 | Commercial scaffold | Chicken chorioallantoin membrane | Scaffolds with co-immobilized VEGF and Ang-1 further improved angiogenesis as compared to independently immobilized VEGF or Ang-1 | ||
| composite | Poly(ether)urethane-polydimethylsiloxane | VEGF & bFGF | Spray-phase | Subcutaneous implant and unilateral hind limb ischemia model in rat | Incorporation of VEGF, bFGF and heparin in the composite scaffold enhances angiogenesis | ||
| temperature sensitive injectable hydrogel | PVL-b-PEG-b-PVL | VEGF | Metal-free cationic | Myocardial infarction rat model (coronary artery ligation) | The system preserved ventricular | ||
| fibrous membranes | Dextran/PLGA | VEGF | Coaxial electrospinning | The system positively promotes cell proliferation | |||
| dual layered scaffold combined with an osmotic release mechanism | Poly(trimethylene carbonate) | VEGF & HGF | Cross linking | System able to release combined GFs at similar rates, and at controllable sequences | |||
| PARTICLES | NPs | Hyaluronic acid/chitosan | VEGF & PDGF-BB | Ionic gelification technique | - | NPs entrap efficiently both factors. PDGF-BB is released in a sustained manner over 1 week and VEGF within the first 24 hours. | |
| PLGA/heparin/fibrin | VEGF | Spontaneous emulsion solvent diffusion method | Rabbit ischemic hind limb | The system strongly increases the | |||
| PLGA | VEGF | Modification of the double emulsion method | Hindlimb ischemia in mice | Feasibility of the system | |||
| MPs | PLGA | VEGF | Double emulsion/solvent evaporation method | The system allows VEGF encapsulation and bioactive protein release up to 21 days | |||
| PLGA | VEGF | Double emulsion/solvent evaporation method | Myocardial infarction rat model (coronary artery ligation) | ||||
| Collagen | VEGF | Cross linking | The system allows VEGF encapsulation and bioactive protein release up to 4 weeks | ||||
| PARTICLES- | MPs | PLGA (MPs) | VEGF | MPs: spray dry | Murine model of peripheral angiogenesis | Both formulations provide a method to incite neovascularization from a single injection | |
| NPs | NPs: Dextran-sulfate/chitosan | VEGF | NPs: complex formation and coacervation | Subcutaneous injection (NPs-Matrigel®) | Angiogenesis was clearly improved by VEGF encapsulation and further incorporation into implants, compared to direct VEGF incorporation into implants | ||
| MPs-Scaffold | Alginate MPs | VEGF & MCP-1 | Cross linking | Subcutaneous implant model in mice | Delivery of multiple therapeutic proteins to enhance the efficacy of cell-based vascularization | ||
| OTHER | Polymeric | Poly(trimethylene carbonate) | VEGF | - | Subcutaneous injection in rat | The approach has potential for providing effective, local, bioactive growth factor delivery. | |
| Collagen patches | Collagen | VEGF | Collagen binding domain is fused to VEGF | Myocardial implantation | Patches improve left ventricular cardiac function and increase the vascular density | ||
Figure 1The main DDSs employed in recent years in the field of VEGF and cardiac repair are represented. In the particles (nano or microsized) VEGF can be included homogenously through the entire particle (A) or only in the core of the system (B), which affects the release profile. A wide variety of scaffolds has been designed. In a thermosensitive injectable hydrogel (C) at temperatures under 37 ºC the blend of the vehicle and the VEGF remains liquid, but when it is injected and reaches the body temperature the mixture solidifies and VEGF is entrapped within the gel matrix (D). By electrospinning fibrous scaffolds are built up (E) whereas porous scaffolds (F) can be formed by solvent casting and particulate leaching method.
Figure 2Depending on the VEGF carrier different routes of administration can be chosen. Solid scaffolds need to be attached to the heart, frequently covering the infarcted area (A). Particles can be injected in the desired zone intracoronarily using a catheter (B) or by direct injection (C). Injectable scaffolds can also be implanted using this route.
Figure 3Simplification of how VEGF release profile can be modified when included in particles or in particles embedded in scaffolds.