| Literature DB >> 26640374 |
Javed Ahmad1, Sohail Akhter2, Md Rizwanullah1, Saima Amin1, Mahfoozur Rahman3, Mohammad Zaki Ahmad4, Moshahid Alam Rizvi5, Mohammad A Kamal6, Farhan Jalees Ahmad7.
Abstract
Considering the challenges associated with conventional chemotherapy, targeted and local delivery of chemotherapeutics via nanoparticle (NP) carriers to the lungs is an emerging area of interest. Recent studies and growing clinical application in cancer nanotechnology showed the huge potential of NPs as drug carriers in cancer therapy, including in lung carcinoma for diagnosis, imaging, and theranostics. Researchers have confirmed that nanotechnology-based inhalation chemotherapy is viable and more effective than conventional chemotherapy, with lesser side effects. Recently, many nanocarriers have been investigated, including liposomes, polymeric micelles, polymeric NPs, solid lipid NPs, and inorganic NPs for inhalation treatments of lung cancer. Yet, the toxicity of such nanomaterials to the lungs tissues and further distribution to other organs due to systemic absorption on inhalation delivery is a debatable concern. Here, prospect of NPs-based local lung cancer targeting through inhalation route as well as its associated challenges are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: drug targeting; inhalational chemotherapy; lung cancer; nanoparticles; nanotoxicity
Year: 2015 PMID: 26640374 PMCID: PMC4657804 DOI: 10.2147/NSA.S49052
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanotechnol Sci Appl ISSN: 1177-8903
Examples of different nanoparticles investigated as targeted anticancer therapeutic carrier for inhalation treatment in lung cancer
| Nanomedicines | Chemotherapeutics | In vitro/in vivo model | Remarks | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Polymeric micelles | Paclitaxel | Male Sprague Dawley rats | Prolonged activity in the lungs and reduced systemic toxicity. AUC0–12 in lungs was 45 times greater than iv-administered formulation. The targeting efficiency to lungs through the pulmonary route was 132-fold higher than the iv route | |
| Liposomes | Paclitaxel and cyclosporine A | Female BALB/c mice; Renca lung metastases mouse model | Targeted combinational drug delivery through liposomes showed excellent antitumor effect | 77 |
| Dendrimers | Doxorubicin | Male Sprague Dawley rats, female F344 rats, MAT 13762 IIIB rat model | Pulmonary administration of drug reduced the lung tumor burden by 95% as compared to control. The number of metastatic foci in the lungs was also reduced significantly | |
| Polymer-drug conjugates | Cisplatin | Female Sprague Dawley rats, A549 cell line | Compared to conventional iv infusion, inhalational administration of the hyaluronan–cisplatin conjugate showed higher drug accumulations in the lung tissues | |
| Magnetic nanoparticles | Quercetin | Female BALB/c mice, A549 cell line | Actively targeted to specific lung cancerous cells, the drug-loaded PLGA-MNPs considerably decreased the number of viable A549 cells | |
| NLC | Cxb | BALB/c mice; A549 orthotopic lung cancer model | Cxb-NLC nebulization showed ~4 times greater AUC of Cxb in lung tissues as compared to the drug solution. Lung residence time also improved significantly | |
| Solid lipid nanoparticles | Paclitaxel | B6D2F1 female mice, MXT-B2 cell model | Sustained drug release. Inhalational treatment was more efficient in reducing the number and size of lung metastases when compared to iv delivery of same drug | |
| Epirubicin | Male Sprague Dawley rats, A549 cell line | Higher cytotoxicity was observed with SLN as compared to that of drug solution. The respirable fraction of SLNs could reach 78.46% and remained stable during nebulization | ||
| Doxorubicin | BALB/c mouse model, NCL-H460 cell line | Inhalable doxorubicin nanoparticle powders increased the survival time of cancer bearing mice compared to iv administration of the same drug dose with lesser cardiotoxicity | ||
| Polymeric nanoparticles | Telmisartan and losartan | Nu/nu mice, A549 orthotopic and metastatic tumor models, A549 and H1650 cell line | Increased penetration and uniform intratumoral distribution of fluorescent polystyrene nanoparticles. Inhalation delivery (alternative days) of formulation shows significant reduction in the lung tumor weights compared to vehicle-treated control groups. Significant reduction in the VEGF levels in tumor homogenates was observed | |
| Doxorubicin and Cisplatin | NCR nude mice, orthotopic model, A549 cell line | Drugs are actively targeted to specific moiety of lung cancerous cells. Approximately 73% of mesoporous nanoparticles was retained in the lungs after inhalation administration, which was 14.6 times higher when compared to iv injection | ||
| NeutrAvidinFITC | SCID mice model, A549 cell line | The entrance efficiency of nanoparticles in lung adenocarcinoma cells (A549) was increased as compared to that in the normal fibroblast cells (HFL1) and lung squamous cells (H520). The formulation shows dose-dependent cytotoxicity | ||
| NeutrAvidinFITC | BALB/cAnN.Cg-Foxn1nu/CrlNarl mice model; A549 cell line | Gelatin nanoparticles modified with EGF (GP–Av–bEGF) could trap by EGFR-overexpression cancer cells, resulting in a greater degree of accumulation in the cancerous lung tissue. Nanoparticles delivered by inhalation do not cause lung inflammation and are thus safe for use | ||
| Cisplatin | SCID mice in subcutaneous cancer model, metastatic lung cancer model, A549 cell line | Inhalational treatment with GP–Pt–bEGF showed that the Pt concentration was twofold higher in A549 tumor cells than in the HFL1 cells. The IC50 values for GP–Pt–bEGF were twofold lower than CDDP for the A549 cells. Moreover, GP–Pt–bEGF had stronger antitumor activity and was less nephrotoxic than free CDDP and GP–Pt in a subcutaneous model |
Abbreviations: AUC0–12, area under the plasma concentration–time curve from 0 to 12 hours; CDDP, cis-diamminedichloroplatinum; Cxb, Celecoxib; GP–Pt–bEGF, CDDP integrated with gelatin nanoparticles were combined with biotinylated epidermal growth factor; GP–Pt–bEGF, gelatin nanoparticles implanted with NeutrAvidinFITC and bEGF; IC50, half maximal inhibitory concentration; iv, intravenous; NLC, nanostructured lipid carriers; PLGA-MNP, poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) coated magnetic nanoparticles; SCID, severe combined immunodeficiency; SLN, solid lipid nanoparticles; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; HFL, human lung fibroblasts.
Figure 1Organs exposure and toxicity associated with inhalational NPs.
Note: The figure indicates that such NPs can accumulate into the lungs for a very long time and may also enter into the systemic circulation and subsequently reach the other vital organs through blood flow.
Abbreviation: NP, nanoparticle.