| Literature DB >> 25258527 |
Volkmar Weissig1, Tracy K Pettinger2, Nicole Murdock3.
Abstract
In 2000, the National Institute of Health launched the National Nanotechnology Initiative to support, coordinate, and advance research and development of nanoscale projects. The impact of this new program on health-science related research and development became quickly visible. Broad governmental financial support advanced the start of new, and the deepening of already existing, interdisciplinary research. The anticipated merger of nanoscience with medicine quickly instigated the conceptualization of nanomedicine. The adoption of nanoscience terminology by pharmaceutical scientists resulted in the advent of nanopharmaceuticals. The term "nano" became tantamount to "cutting-edge" and was quickly embraced by the pharmaceutical science community. Colloidal drug delivery systems reemerged as nanodrug delivery systems; colloidal gold became a suspension of nano gold particles. In this review, we first review nanoscience related definitions applied to pharmaceuticals, we then discuss all 43 currently approved drug formulations which are publicized as nanopharmaceuticals, and finally we analyze clinical aspects of selected drug formulations.Entities:
Keywords: amphotericin-B; drug delivery; fenofibrate; nanodrugs; nanomedicine; nanoparticle
Mesh:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25258527 PMCID: PMC4172146 DOI: 10.2147/IJN.S46900
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nanomedicine ISSN: 1176-9114
Approved drugs commonly referred to as “nanopharmaceuticals”
| Name | Description | Mechanism of action | Approval/indication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amphotericin B encapsulated in liposomes (60–70 nm) composed of hydrogenated soy phosphatidylcholine, cholesterol, and distearoyl phosphatidylglycerol (2/0.8/1 molar) | MPS targeting: Liposomes preferentially accumulate in organs of the MPS. Negative charge contributes to MPS targeting. Selective transfer of the drug from lipid complex to target fungal cell with minimal uptake into human cells has been postulated | FDA 1997 | |
| Daunorubicin citrate encapsulated in liposomes (45 nm) composed of distearoyl phosphatidylcholine and cholesterol (2/1 molar) | Passive targeting via EPR effect: Concentration of available liposomal drug in tumors exceeds that of free drug. Liposomal daunorubicin persists at high levels for several days | FDA 1996 | |
| Cytarabine encapsulated in multivesicular liposomes (20 μm; classified as nanopharmaceutical based on its individual drug containing “chambers”) made from dioleoyl lecithin, dipalmitoyl phosphatidylglycerol, cholesterol, and triolein | Sustained release: This formulation of cytarabine maintains cytotoxic concentrations of the drug in the cerebrospinal fluid for more than 14 days after a single 50 mg injection | FDA 1999/2007 | |
| Morphine sulfate encapsulated in multivesicular liposomes (17–23 μm; per se not a nanopharmaceutical – classified as such based only on its individual drug containing “nano-sized chambers”) made from dioleoyl lecithin cholesterol, dipalmitoyl phosphatidylglycerol, tricaprylin, and triolein | Sustained release: After the administration into the epidural space, morphine sulfate is released from the multivesicular liposomes over an extended period of time | FDA 2004 | |
| Doxorubicin hydrochloride encapsulated in Stealth® liposomes (100 nm) composed of N-(carbonyl-methoxypolyethylene glycol 2000)-1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero3-phosphoethanolamine sodium, fully hydrogenated soy phosphatidylcholine, and cholesterol | Passive targeting via EPR effect: Extravasation of liposomes by passage of the vesicles through endothelial cell gaps present in solid tumors. Enhanced accumulation of doxorubicin in lesions of AIDS-associated KS after administration of PEG-liposomal doxorubicin | FDA 1995 | |
| Influenza virus antigens (hemagglutinin, neuraminidase) on surface of 150 nm Liposomes | Mimicking native antigen presentation: Liposomes mimic the native virus structure, thus allowing for cellular entry and membrane fusion. | Switzerland 1997 | |
| Vincristine sulfate encapsulated in sphingomyelin/cholesterol (60/40, molar) 100 nm liposomes | Passive targeting via EPR effect: Extravasation of liposomes through fenestra in bone marrow endothelium | FDA 2012 | |
| Mifamurtide (synthetic muramyl tripeptide-phosphatidylethanolamine) incorporated into large multilamellar liposomes composed of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycerol-3-phosphocholine and 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phospho-L-serine | MPS targeting: The drug, an immune stimulant, is anchored in negatively charged liposomal bilayer membrane | Europe 2009 | |
| Doxorubicin encapsulated 180 nm oligolamellar liposomes composed of egg phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol (1/1, molar) | MPS targeting: Forms “MPS depot”, slow release into blood circulation resembles prolonged infusion | Europe 2000 | |
| Verteporfin in liposomes made of dimyristoyl-phosphatidylcholine and egg phosphatidylglycerol (negatively charged); lyophilized cake for reconstitution | Drug solubilization: Rendering drug biocompatible and enhancing ease of IV administration. No other apparent function of liposomes. Liposomal formulation instable in the presence of serum. Fast transfer of verteporfin from Visudyne® to lipoproteins | FDA 2000 | |
| Amphotericin B complex 1:1 with DMPC and DMPG (7:3), >250 nm, ribbon like structures of a bilayered membrane | MPS targeting: Selective transfer of drug from lipid complex to fungal cell with minimal uptake into human cells has been postulated | FDA 1995 and 1996 | |
| Amphotericin B complex with cholesteryl sulfate (1:1). Colloidal dispersion of disc-like particles, 122 nm ×4 nm15 | MPS targeting | ||
| PEGylated adenosine deaminase | Increased circulation time and reduced immunogenicity | FDA 1990 | |
| PEGylated antibody (Fab’ fragment of a humanized anti-TNF-alpha antibody) | FDA 2008 | ||
| PEGylated filgrastim (granulocyte colony-stimulating factor) | FDA 2002 | ||
| PEGylated L-asparaginase | FDA 1994 | ||
| PEGylated interferon alfa-2b | FDA 2002 | ||
| PEGylated interferon alfa-2b | FDA 2001 | ||
| PEGylated human growth hormone receptor antagonist | FDA 2003 | ||
| PEGylated anti-VEGF aptamer | FDA 2004 | ||
| PEGylated epoetin beta (erythropoietin receptor activator) | FDA 2007 | ||
| Aprepitant as nanocrystal | Increased bioavailability due to increased dissolution rate: Below 1,000 nm, the saturation solubility becomes a function of the particle size leading to an increased saturation solubility of nanocrystals, which in turn increases the concentration gradient between gut lumen and blood, and consequently the absorption by passive diffusion | FDA 2003 | |
| Megestrol acetate as nanocrystal | FDA 2005 | ||
| Rapamycin (sirolimus) as nanocrystals formulated in tablets | FDA 2002 | ||
| Fenofibrate as nanocrystals | FDA 2004 | ||
| Fenofibrate as insoluble drug-delivery microparticles | Hypercholesterolemia, hypertriglyceridemia (oral) | ||
| Polypeptide (average MW 6.4 kDa) composed of four amino acids (glatiramer) | No mechanism attributable to nanosize. Based on its resemblance to myelin basic protein, glatiramer is thought to divert as a “decoy” an autoimmune response against myelin | FDA 1996/2014 | |
| Leuprolide acetate (synthetic GnRH or LH-RH analog) incorporated in nanoparticles composed of PLGH copolymer (DL-lactide/glycolide; 1/1, molar) | Sustained release | FDA 2002 | |
| Paclitaxel in 20–50 nm micelles | Passive targeting via EPR effect | South Korea 2001 | |
| Paclitaxel covalently linked to solid nanoparticles composed of polyglutamate | Passive targeting via EPR effect: Drug release inside solid tumor via enzymatic hydrolysis of polyglutamate | FDA 2012 | |
| Cross-linked poly allylamine hydrochloride, | No mechanism attributable to nano size. Phosphate binder | FDA 2000 | |
| Conjugate protein or copolymer of styrene-maleic acid and an antitumor protein NCS. | Passive targeting via EPR effect | Japan 1994 | |
| Nanoparticles (130 nm) formed by albumin with conjugated paclitaxel | Passive targeting via EPR effect: Dissociation into individual drug-bound albumin molecules, which may mediate endothelial transcytosis of paclitaxel via albumin-receptor mediated pathway | FDA 2005 | |
| Immunoconjugate. Monoclonal antibody (against human epidermal growth factor receptor-2)–drug (DM1, a cytotoxin acting on microtubule) conjugate, linked via thioether | No mechanism attributable to nano size | FDA 2013 | |
| Recombinant fusion protein of fragment A of diphtheria toxin and subunit binding to interleukin-2 receptor | Fusion protein binds to interleukin-2 receptor, followed by receptor-mediated endocytosis; fragment A of diphtheria toxin then released into cytosol where it inhibits protein synthesis | FDA 1994/2006 | |
| Lyophilized powder of amphotericin B with added sodium deoxycholate. Forms upon reconstitution colloidal (micellar) dispersion | Drug solubilization: Rendering drug biocompatible and enhancing ease of administration after IV injection | FDA 1966 | |
| Oil-in-water emulsion of propofol in soybean oil/glycerol/egg lecithin | Drug solubilization: Rendering drug biocompatible and enhancing ease of administration after IV injection | FDA 1989 | |
| Emulsion of estradiol in soybean oil, polysorbate 80, ethanol, and water | Drug solubilization | FDA 2003 | |
| Superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles coated with dextran. Iron oxide core 4.8–5.6 nm, hydrodynamic diameter 80–150 nm | MPS targeting: 80% taken up by liver and up to 10% by spleen within minutes of administration. Tumor tissues do not take up these particles and thus retain their native signal intensity | FDA 1996 | |
| Superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles coated with dextran. Hydrodynamic diameter >50 nm | MPS targeting: Iron released inside macrophages, subsequently enters into intracellular storage iron pool, or is transferred to plasma transferrin | FDA 2009 | |
| Aminosilane-coated superparamagnetic iron oxide 15 nm nanoparticles | Thermal ablation: Injecting iron oxide nanoparticles exposed to alternating magnetic field causing the nanoparticles to oscillate, generating heat directly within the tumor tissue | Europe 2013 | |
| Recombinant adenovirus expressing wildtype-p53 (rAd-p53) | “[…] the adenoviral particle infects tumor target cells and delivers the adenovirus genome carrying the therapeutic p53 gene to the […] nucleus […] The expressed p53 gene appears to exert its antitumor activities” | People’s Republic of China 2003 | |
| Gene for dominant-negative mutant form of human cycline G1, which blocks endogenous cyclin-G1 protein and thus stops cell cycle, inserted into retroviral core (replication-incompetent retrovirus) devoid of viral genes. About 100 nm particle | Targeted gene therapy: This retrovirus-derived particle targets specifically exposed collagen, which is a common histopathological property of metastatic tumor formation | Philippines 2007 | |
Abbreviations: DMPC, dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine; DMPG, dimyristoyl phosphatidylglycerol; EPR, enhanced permeability and retention; FDA, US Food and Drug Administration; GnRH, Gonadotropin-releasing hormone; IV, intravenous; KS, Kaposi’s sarcoma; LH-RH, Luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone; MPS, Mononuclear phagocyte system; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; MW, molecular weight; NCS, neocarzinostatin; PEG, polyethylene glycol; PLGH, poly-(D,L-lactide-co-glycolide); SC, subcutaneous.
Clinical data of amphotericin B formulations
| Amphotericin B products | Clinical efficacy (all nanoproducts versus Fungizone®) | Safety (all nanoproducts versus Fungizone®) | Common dose | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IV 0.3–1.5 mg/kg/day (max: 1.5 mg/kg/day) | $96/day (max dose) | |||
| Noninferiority confirmed | ↓ Nephrotoxicity | IV 5 mg/kg/day (doses of up to 6 mg/kg/day have been used) | $840/day | |
| ↓ Mortality rates | ↓ Infusion time (Amphotec® and AmBisome®) | IV 3–4 mg/kg/day (doses up to 6 mg/kg/day have been used) | $448/day | |
| No difference in clinical cure rates | Abelcet® has ↑ infusion related toxicities | IV 3–6 mg/kg/day (doses up to 15 mg/kg/day have been used clinically) | $1,646/day |
Note:
Cost relates to price per day for a 70 kg patient using the upper limit of dosing range.
Abbreviations: ↓, decreased; ↑, increased; IV, intravenous.
Clinical data on fenofibrate products
| Product | Formulation | Clinical efficacy | Safety | Strength | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antara® | Micronized capsule | No mortality benefit in those with type 2 diabetes. | No differences in safety outcomes | 30 mg | $78.42 |
| Fenoglide | MeltDose tablets | 40 mg | $106.20 | ||
| Lofibra® | Film-coated tablet (formerly Tricor®2) | 54 mg | $23.76 | ||
| Lipofen® | Lidose capsule | 50 mg | $87.96 | ||
| Tricor® | Nanocrystal (Tricor®NP) | Lipid profile shows decreased TG and LDL. | 48 mg | $57.29 | |
| Triglide® | IDD-P | Equivalent absorption when compared to Tricor®1 and Tricor®2. | 160 mg | $239.70 |
Notes:
Cost relates to price per 30 days.
Generic available; priced according to generic price.
Abbreviations: IDD-P, Insoluble Drug Delivery – Particles™ technology; LDL, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; TG, triglycerides.